Gleaner_19440511

VOL. XIX NAZARETH COLLEGE. ROCHESTER. N.Y., :.1AY 11,1944 No.6
Liberal Arts Students Receive
Advice For Future Occupations
C. S. M. C. Units
To Meet May 18th
At The Academy
SOPHS CHOOSE BETTY CASS
GLEANER EDITOR FOR '44 - '45
Wt Prl!.;t"nt 01 th:rd tepo t by out· Platenw:u Dir(!~tor, Mi~ Eva This it the~lnlv<!a .. ~.~u·y oC
1
Sch•. einer. on the opportunities now open to C"uholic college women. the Catholic StudcnU A1i8!!1ion
Whtle the goal of most Catholi<· collettt women is a home and Crusade. To ~t-lrbnttt, the C. S.
famll)'. many of them are forced by economir eonditions to deter the ~1. C. unit& In Rotheater .arc plan·
, .1 e tabli•hment of a homt: a.nd to follow a proftaion for 8 longer or ning a big ~Jluion Day at Naz...
•horter ~riod. depending on individual circum .. umces At present. the ar~th Atadt-M)' on AJt.ceMion
••ar adds another uncertainty to future marital opportunitie!:$--many Thursday. lla)' 18. Members of the
of our pre,.ent college ~tudents may be careet women re$tardless of Fremin lti1ttion Unit of :\auteth
their ldu' or ideals. ,-- College, t.ein« mtmbera of the c.
Pe1 haJ)3 thi-" i$ the reason wh) may •·ell explore is that of librar· S, l1. C .• will of cou~ attend the
colle~ee women oC ou1• day art ian N'oL only it this profession a confe1·ence.
n1o1e eonce1·ned About careers than ~ftli8fyinsr and stimulnting one to Proa-rarn o f th• Day
their wlslcas of yesteryear, why I the P<~non of .sLudious te"_lpera· . l. Pontifical Ultth Mas• - the
m1'ny or th~m a1'C taking ti 1·nther ment, but eerbun types of hbrnry B•shop celebl·tlting, of course-in
IOilk look into the future ot• tll'e wmk offer ~lttruttive flnnntial t"C· Nazureth Audltol'tum nt 0:30.
lookinR" forwa1·d to JZTadunte wol'k. wm cl~. 'l'he lU'Ospectivc hbt·arian Fnthel" Ehmnnn will conduct the
Thi" ft.l'ti<;le is not. intended fo•· may c:hoo•(l ns her nc~d. the high tingin~ of the Mn83 by the con­tht
,:ch·l who ill a geni us no-r 1 r school, college, techmcal school. grega.uorl. Fnthc•· ll u1·1ey from
the ail"! who even before !-he e~- or ~ome b!·anch of. t.he pu~lic li- C_rugade C•stlc in Cincinnati will
t~l'('cl college had definitely decid· brary 1('1'V1C'c.'. Pat"tiCUlsrly U'l the gJ\'e the- t'el'll\OJl.
td on a tareer tor which she h~~od laJtt nan-u'd one _can find ~ope for 2 Conference on condition of
•ome ,;pecial 3ptitude. or to which any t>·~ of ap_u~ude ~r intet-t:&:t- Church in l.atin-Am~dca - con��the
wa 1 e•pecialJv attracted bul reJ~:earc~. edmant!<.trauon, contact ducte-d by Fatht"r Fearl~
to th.alt coruide.~ble num~r of '~~~rk wnh all t.)'~$ of adults and 3. DiKu.ion .-rou~.
)'OUng women. who have t.a.ken the C"~lldren. In add1t1on to thHe more a. Latin-America- .Jo""ather Con-l..
ibetal Aru course and come-- w1dely known posauontt. pnetieally nor, who i!l ju..t beek from South
quentl)• have no ,.oc-~tional train· all of tht lafJlt ind~tri.al con· Amerita.
ina but do have the but founda- tern~, banking innitutions and b. ~egro problem Monsignor
tion IJO•tdble for graduate work Jaw firm" tmploy librarions-re. William R. ltcCann, IJaAtor of
eith~r immediately or afte.-
8 8~ Jli~arch lnbonlt.Ories ore looking for la.rgelJt Negro pndoth in !'\ew York On Ma>• 3 the Sophomo e Clan of N'a%a~eth eleeted Bett>• Ctu'l
cnlled "OJJJ)renticesbip .. or sampl- hbrary-~rained. perB~nJ; position§ City. e~itor-in-c~iC!C The Clellner for next year. Be ... ty, who i.s m~jcning an
inJC JH!l'iOtl in Aome tield. nre av•llltblc m vnr1oua bra.n~he!S c Homt Mill&lon~ _ to be ton- h1story, wall starL htl" Jot.ll mdl11tit dutieta next fall. The fir11t IA$U(' ot
0 0 • • • of the Gov4.'rnment. State and Fed· tluctcd by Mist.c•·~ or 0 ll'liuionlii'Y The Cleaner under hca· guidance will come orr the p~·c&&elll in October.
bvJousl~ lt. would ~e •mposslb~e e a·nl for young wom~n wi th s r>e- onter - Belly's home i~~t in Ont.twio, New
~on~~~'·c;~ 1;1 ,:11 "rtlcler of ~~11~ cinlixed t.l'Aining in Acic•H~e 1:1nd re- •1. Confce·encc on <'Onditions iu U. of R. Professor Yo1·k, "'here sh~ attended Ontnrlo
~~ 'I'~ -•1 A c careers o•: w •• •••rch, including • wo•·king knowl- the hom• ml .. ion flc ld-.:onduct<•d Gives Talk Here lligh School. In her pl'C·college
f~
1
"! e•~ rtsf cocrse 13,
11
pn.. :- edge of fo1·cisrn languagu. Many by a PauliRt fothe1· da)·~ there s.hc waA an honot· ~tu-t'
au till~. ome 0 u.s can stl re- of these pocnion" of courlie t'e- 5. Benediction of the Blessed , . . dtont. being editor of tht! yearbook.
c•H the: ()K;, \\111:"11 IIIVI11. girl:s whv quh·e gn.tdualt work - 60mc { Sacrament. Amu.smsc as ~ell aA lntere"tin!l' The E c.ho , and ::.lao va1odicto••fan
went. to coll~ge naturnll)• prepAred th
1
.
1 1 ° wa~ the talk gaven .he1·e by 01'. or her cl• ..
tor traehmg. with tbe re:tult thrtt em M Itt e. aa tw~ ''f' 1\if~lt:ster 6· Dantt-. 0 I C fi ld A I ·- lhi.t b-•m• one or the O"er~-···d· hourA or tratnin~ In .a l.tbral')'l The only chargto will be $.25 e OS •." te •• SSOCIRte profe&."-Ot Bett.y,s ambition i~ to teaeh hi•
on. • __ ..,.. rehool· olh~ M A L b r I h I of Spamsh lang-ua.-e at tht' Uni- tor)' fl f 't d' .
t"d proft. don!, • condition which . ' n an "' . . tn I rar)' or unc • A I aro urged to ~me "ersity of Roe:bt.,ter. ·• er A\'On f: - av("nuonA are
txilttd until military and govern- Selene•. Th{'re are. howe¥er, ee.r- at least for Maq and part of the Dr. Canfield conducted us on readmg. and s.port"C. S~e :ead.s
menl ea.reera. or attractive offenJ (Continued on Page 6) I day. one: of his "loon," devotinR the srre.a~ literature enthusJattt:ally
ln dden"'e industries. dre\\ both I first few min t f hi I and 1.! an e::cpert basketball player.
W
u e! 0 1 ecture 10 ln • statement to The C le•"•"
men nnd women from the field or JNNERS OF THE NAZARETH •puking Spanish which h• opeaka · b
4!duenlion . "''itb amazing ftueney Dl'i'c•·ibin« c:o~ce~mg. er new honor Betty
o\l Jli"C1ent the tcnehing proft>~- SCHQLAR.SHJPS ANNQUNCED~ hhil t~ip thru_ Panan1a he spoke o( :':~~· :-r!z:!~hd~h=l~;:ta~~"~;:p~~
ion offer" man)' opportunities, t e 1mpress1ve "montnnu mu)' po~ible ...
eapceiRIIy In c:erluin subjects; rot· alta3 que se venn l'n nn'lbo._ lndos I ---·-- l'Xftnlllle, Mathcmnlits. Seicncc, The llftme• or the winner>; or the Kolesnik , or 0UJ' IA&dy or Mercy de lu c.arretCJ'8 de """""'"·" Ill• STUDENTS NAME
)fu-1<·, !=i~c,·cttu·ial. sonH~ o r whith !'-lnz:1~rt'th College Deanc•')' Sc:hol- High School; J\ubu 1·n J)(!unca·y. compo~ason of Lhe South Amel'i-hnve
been hltheJ·to dominated by lll'.hllll JIWftl'ded to Cntholic Aigh Karline Koenen. •l•tm· or Marion ••••• •cleo or the typlcnl North NEW OFFICERS
men. Whllt ther~ are some di.s.ad- School atudcntll fC1'ndutlt.ing fl'om Koenen. S<>ni01' rat Ntazoe·cth now, .\merif.an and vice: vcaan w1u VCI'.Y I --- •ontOilC1 tonneeted with Leae.hing, Cnthollc and public high schools of Holy F"nmil:v II Itch School; cn~rt.aining. "Ou•• id~a of the Amid the cheers for the new,
whilt the life of a t.e:aehea· is not in the llot·h~tel' Diocc~e in June, Cornin~ Denncry, Jlelen O'Leary t.ypacal South Amcric11n is of n und le"rslor the old, College tlec·
an U!\>' one. the 1-ttUdt:nt should 19;&(, have bH~n announe.~d. These of .Mt. )torriJ llfsrh School; 1-:Jmi~ dark-hait·ed, K.mooth and t;lipptl·y
1
t.ion.s we~·e held April 20 ftl Stu·
bur in mind Father Lord's wa.rn- full tuition ltthol&rjhi.,_. a.~ award- Deanery, ~Jay F.liubeth Donnf'll)' looking individual with mcnafinsc dent Hoar. The returns tam~ In
insr: ''If a career appea..ta ea"Y· dis-, ed on thr ba\iJC of scholal"$bip, of Ow~o Fret \('ath•my, Owt$[0: bl~ck e:yeo;.. a darin~t ~mile. • lont •" foll?ws:
lUst it. There i~ ~omething v.TOng leadership, pe111onality, finan~ial Cene,·a DeanNy, \tl-. 1\atherine staffiy waxed "mu"tacho."' a wide Pretndent of Undergrad: Ro"e-­with
an ea"')' career as then is cer- .uuu~. and ch•neter rffommend- .-\nne ~mhh of De Sale. Hisrh ~Qmbrero (alwayt a ~omb~ro) a mary Welc:h; Vice.Pre!4ident, Jean
tainl)' ~mething: wrong with easy ation. Tht).. "'·~re o~ered by ~ax.· &-hool. 5WMhing rt-d .. uh and b••sr)" Flanall8n: Seeretary, Eleanor lta·
money." Suctt!IS in an)• field is de· &rNh Collttrt fo1· the first time in 8f:l';id~ tht Ofan~ry Kho1anhip pants.'' "Oh" and hf' added ~mil- Ioney·:: Trea~urer, Kay Cutler.
P"(lndtnt on t.mt'! ability to work. lUll, in srrateful re~ognition of winntr!i, tho~<" w1nntn in the com- in~.-maybe a. knife between hi" Other officers are: Fremin
furth(!r, tenehing does furnish teeth.'' Minion Unit. pre~ident. Dorothy
•ome of Lhe important qualifica- This de:cription pr()''oked Jnugh. Wegman; vice-president. Mnttha
tion• of n ""ti.racto•·y caree1·: nn ARE YOU AFRAID TO PRAY?? I te•· from his audience who waited Sheedy: Sodality prefect, Jean
Ol>J>Ot·tunity for con~tant de,•elop- b•·eathlessly for the South Amm·· Foley; vice-prefect, Bcvel"ly Jonea.
ment nnd odvnnc:emenl. roa· the Youl' bL·others and sweethearts arc n•t Ufl'ald ican's description or lhc Yankee. 'rhus fat• the eledion l'eturn"
per•onol satisfaction thut come• to spend days at a time cur led up in n fox- To him the typlcnl Northcl'llcr fo•· the different ela;s oni<c•·• ..,..,
from jttJ•vicc gi"cn and gGod done hole. must th·rst be tnll, vc1·y tnll. llo is Junior Class-Pt·esiclent, Pnh·icin
to othel'·s. (liiJJccially to young pco. Ql' to die. olway111 blond. ond bl uc-~)'~d. HiM O'GI'nd>ti Vice- President.. Jcnn
pie Teaching unquestionably •·~- hair iJ usually uncombed and he Sc.hantz; See1·etnl'y. Relen florey;
main" un out.standing opportunit>' The~· are afraid. though, of not coming <it.K in on offiee all day wilh his T1·easurer, Margie Kuus; Council
fol' C'alholie action in the truut home. ftct on the desk, ''<'I')' big feet- Repr6enuni\'e., Pe-ggy Beal: Pnr·
Hn•e of the term, espeda11)' for \Vhy are you unwilling to give them courage he must have ''ery bi~ feet. In liame:nUlrian, Terry O'C'onno1·.
tho•o who are interested in the de- with prayer, daily prayer, hard prayer? 21ho1""t. the South American'• 1,ie· Sophomore CIa sa - PteAidtnt,
••lopmont of young people. With a Mass? With a real visit to Ou•· Lord ture or the typical Xortherne,. Jeonne l-ennon; Council Ropr .. •n·
Anoth~r caRer the pos!:ibilities every day? mu~t be: one of complttt relaxn- tath·c, Ro~emary Dooley.
of which Liberal Art.~ graduates tiQn. \\' hy? Dr. Canfield procoed•d to po1nt
La"t week tht Junior ClaSJ
el~eted t.ouise Beahon editor·
in-chief of Verily Fa..ir for next
YNU'. l..<>uise, an English majo1·
urul nn honor studenL hu con­tributed
i'cverul poems to t he
CIIUJ)UII quorlcl'ly in t he past.
thrctl rem"'
Congl'atulations and good luck
in your new position, Louise!
thC! generou11 o.ul.!tance given by
the people or the Dio•••e or Roch·
estea· t.o Lhe Nu~tH·et h College
Building Fund, which helped to
mnke JlOMsible t.he erection of t.he
th•·ec fine new College buildings
on 1!:1tat. Avenue- the! Administl'ft•
tion Building, the Cymnat~ium. and
the Oormlt.ory,
The winner• Art a~ follows:
Roche!Cttr Ouner)•. .Min Elaine
petitlve examination!!! we••t t~ISO
annouuced. They Ul'<':
Kathleen A. Milliken of •:lmil·•
Catholic lligh School, $ 1200 ($300
per year foa· four yetu·s).
Mul'lel L. O'Conno•· of St. An·
thony or f'ndun lli!<h School. Sy•·•­eu.<
e, $800 ($200 per )'CUI' ror
[our >•eara).
out the errors of su~h ideM. IU.L·
ing that ~ large pereentaa-e or
South Americans 111re blond and
blue.eyed and their temperramtntl
ore not unlike thoile of their north·
e1n ne ighbo1~ lie sta·c~ed vea·y
plain~)• t hree out!\tnndln~t ehnroc­tel'islics
or the peOJllc or South
Ameden, which we would do well
to remcmbe1': fo"'irst, thnt flft.y per·
cent of the SpaniAh tongue i1 mode
~lory Alice C•'oth or St.
(Continued on P•ge 6)
An- up of gesture., \'C1'it.sble proof of
(Continued on Pal[e 6)
Field Day Today!
The annual •'Field Day" will be
held this afternoon here on the
College tampus. General Chnia·­man
will be Pntricia O'Grady.
It will be a day or run ro•·
evc•·rone. A basebnll game be·
tween Lhc factllt)• nnd studentf!,
directed by Jeanne Lennon, will
be lhe big featUJ'C or the doy.
There will also be a grand fnia·,
hot dOJC$, pop and ie:e cream. for­tune
te:Jiing and a raffle.
2 THE GLEANER
TH E GLEANER BETTER MEN Dear Staff,
NAZARETH COLLEGE
Publication Oftice: George P. Burns Press. lnc., 49~fjl ~011..h Watet• St. H'';:;._~n rises r.·om pmye•· ft belle!l'
vVittt this final issue of the Gleaner, it seems to me
that a few words of thanks and appreciation are in order.
While at times getting an issue out felt like a great sb·ain.
it real ly has been fun. If I "bawled you out'' about dead­lines.
etc., or asked you to do something especially difficult,
you always came through-and fo1· this I am grateful.
J~ IJ i~ 1n·ayer is answet·ed/'
=V=O=L=.=X='=IX=' ====T=B=U=R=S=D=A=Y=-=M=A=Y= I=I=, =1=9=44======:-l=o=. =6 ~~,•:d: ~~,~~~t n~~~.wol'id
Betlet• men . ,
Particularly
Published Montbly
The Student!i of Naz.a1·cth College. Rochester! N. Y.
I:O lTOR·IN·<..:H f~io· OUSlNESS MANACI'!R
Jt".flnne Cbi•varoll Mnrwarit• Krnu11e
Oorie Di~rdorf
NEWS EDI1'0R
Mnry Mt'IU:n&ahl
J.~EATUftE EOI'tOR.
Ronmnry W~leb
SOCJ&'rY EDITOR
Claire Yarter
SPORTS EDJ1'0R
Ooroth)· Wegman
HF.AD TYPIST
Ma ry l..cone
SPORTS
LuciUe Mac)t.haon
J~an L~nnon
Joan Oupn
Mary J••nn~ MCIYftr
Phylli• haan
Muy Kelly
ASSOCJA•rt: EOI'I'ORS
HUMOR EDITOR
M Arilyn M(l(ll't:
ALU:'tlNAf; Jo;OJTOft
M11ry K. llc-aly
ORA)fATIC EDtTOR
Je-an Schanu
J ~Rn Jo'olo;oy
MUSIC ~on·on
Ut!lty K'eejran
P IC'fURJo: Jo;DI'l"'U
£>1~( rfdn o·c rady
An·r t:OI'rOR
.Mndl.'line Nue:c:lt~Ul
LI"T'P.RARY F.OITOR
flohry Lombardo
CIRCULATION MANA(if~tt
Oe-.•erly Jone-e
F.XCt-IANCf: t-:I)ITOR
TYPISTS
Nieolina Levante
MRrla U~rlt>
Ooi'Othy Smhh
Uarb•r• Schr~lc
U~v(l rl.:r McConnell
Mary Sehe"k
N'&WS STAPf'
Maur~en Uenry
Ma r~: arel "McOt'rmott
VfnclniJI Kl••
Teren Riley
t'EA'rUJt~ STAFF
Mnrii! Dl Geonr:lo
OUSlNt:SS STAFF
Ui!ttY l)rt.eo11
J•n• JAtlty
l.oyola Nolan
a.t.rtha Sh~edy
f1orenc~ Het11ler
llelel) bubu
Rosemary Connor Mildred Okol.:.wln Jt'an Schoen
Oeraldint: Cr11mer
1943
SOCJ f.:TY STA J.'F
Martha C•lln~ther
MUSIC STAt•p
Rolltlmary s~an1on
Mem~r
Rssociated Collet5icrte Press
The World Is Waiting· ·
Cynthltt Smith
Corrine F'reoer
1944
The orde1· has been given in Eng land-the ten mile
coastal area is not to be visited without official govern­mental
permission. Visitors may not go into or get out of
England except the American, Russian and British repre­sentatives.
All is in preparation for the signal to be given.
To quote a British minister, "from now on the hour glass
is running out minute by minute." Yes, the whole world is
waiting with anxious hearts to hear the fatal forward
command.
The world is waiting. The Christian world is p•·aying.
Pn•ying that thP. invasion may hP. to thP. point with "~ little
blood shed as possible. We here at Nazareth are but a
small group in the vast ocean of praying souls. But our
prayers are invading heaven with the others. We want our
brotheo-s, friends and fathers to come back soon. We want
them to ccme bael<. We are praying that our deat· ones will
not be numbered among those who must make the supreme
sacri fice. We rea lize that the invasion when it comes, will
not be any easy walk over. Out· boys will have to fight and
fight hard. They need our strength behind them. They
need the courage to see it through no matter how difficult
and weary the grade may be.
We musn't let up now.-with our prayers and sacri­fices.
Our biggest battle is in the otling. It's up to us to
pray and pray hard that God in His Mercy will spare
those we lo,·e as well as their comrades. Now is the time
to stcrm heaven that the earthly stoo·m may be quick, as
blood less as possible yet completely vi ctorious.
Farewell!
Before we become absorbed in exams and the many
activities relative to the end of the school year, we will
here speak a fw words of farewell to the "grave old sen­io•
·s." the Class of '44.
\V e're not going to go into the conditions you'll find
in the "wide, wide world," or in your responsibility to so­ciety,
etc.-we'll leave that to the commencement speak­ers.
We just want to reminisce with you! To tell you how
much we h•lve enjoyed knowing you; how we have felt
your wholesome influence. 8ach class has some universal
characteristic and you seem to be the great intellectuals
of Nazareth who combine mounds of knowledge with a
wonder fu l spi.-it of friendlin ess, fun and cooperation. You
have had a steadying inlluence on us and fot· this we will
always remember you. Too, we are grateful foo· the fun
~·ou have given us in the social activities where you were
the leaders.
Yes, Class of '44, we will miss you!
Until we meet again, light and success in yom· wot·k
and God bless you!
Do not mislead yourseii into believing that undeo·
other cit·cumstances, or in a different environment, you
could and would do better. In your present position you can
prove your greatness of character. Right where you are at
t his moment is the place to begin your best work and to
The Rising Up of better men
Aod the wm·Jd will right itself.
Our so ldi ~t-s need prn)•er, true.
But they will fight on
Whethe•· we r,ray Ol' not.
The really real que~tion,
As 1 see it, is,
That we who al'e here at home,
Sitting, waiting, planning,
Working, hoping, hating, lo,•ing,
Are those who need I'Ca1 prayer.
For wheu those boys come back to
us
It is to us that they will look.
The)• will look to U!;.
The)• will look to the "bette-~·
mnnu-
PI'ltY fot· us! -­PRAY!!!
Want to Jive a few more days?
weeks? month2:1? yCill'S'! Som(!
Yank goldier you know 018)' stay
olive longer if you shake off your
laziness and pray and J)rfly and
pray- Chl'ist in the chaJlCI is j uRt
around thl) corner, and life i~
.sweet to that Yank too, don't. you
think? or don't you'?
The Lord know~ about the w:Jr.
Let Rim know you do, too. There's
an inva.sion eoming UJ) that needs
prayer, and men, and prayer and
materials,-and prayer. Get down
on you1· knees, o ften, and stay
there a while--Too busy?
By the way, between the last
time you heard someone s~y ., Pray
fo1· Peace," and nnw. did you?
MORNING
My special thanks and gratitude go to out· adviser.
Sister Margaret Theresa, who gave us her time unstint·
ing ly; to those "super" associate editors Jean Foley and
"Duck" Dierdorf whose wonderful spirit of coopeo·ation I
shall never forget; to Margie Kraus, our capable business
manager who did a really hud job well; to the all staff
beads and their writers a hearty thank you.
You have been responsible for any measure of suc­cess
that the Gleaner ha$ enjoyed this year. Through you
we have b·ied to give Nazareth the best newsheet possible.
To each and every one of you my sincerest thanks and
best wishes for your happio;ess.
Sincerely,
JEANNE CHlA V AROLI,
Editor
Catholics Least Prejudiced
We hav~ often dec:hwed in this paper that.. Catholics are the Jeast
prejudiced and the most tolerant of all t·eligious gJ·OUJlS. So deep·
~ca ted i:s the oppogite view that it mny be nQces$ary to $ubmit a few
facts to J)l·ove o u1· point .
Ei1·e. tbe: Il"ish Free State, is 95 pel' cent Roman Catholic, yet
its Pt·esident, Douglas Hyde, is a Proteatant. ~orthcrn Ireland i$ abouL
40 per cent. Catholic, yet not one of them holds a position in the Gov­ernment
of Not·thet•n h·ehmd, and the GO per cent, which is P•·otest.nnt,
nlthc•· think$ that it should be thus.
Funcc is !Hi per ecnt Catholic- at least in i;ympathy ~md by tra~
dition- yet its last President, elected b)t the people, was a J ew.
ltal)· is 95 pea· e:ent Catholic-by sympathy nnd in outlook-)•et
the ve t·~· Mayor ot Rome und lhe Prime Minister of lhe n~Hion, when
Mu5Soli ni came into power, were Jews. and Ft•eema.son& of a pto­nouneed
anti-Catholic type.
Hungary is nearly 80 per cent Catholic, yet it$ Regent, !rom the
time of the last 'Vorld War, ha~ been a Protestant.
v· t . -C--t bl ,
47 I Poland, before bel' l'et:cnt destt·u('tion, was !)9 per cent Catholic,
10 otta ontcs a c yet the people elected a Jo'reemnson for Presid~nL
Whnt mnkes us loYc the morninat I . sUJlShine, s ta·eaming Several of th~ South Amea•!enn Republics, whose population fJli
Bright through <lew.kisscd win. 91} P:t· ;ent ?flt~olH:, have had, time 31\d again, and hnvto: now, Pres.i·
dows. gleaming , dent. '" ho A1 e FreemAsons.
Like poli~hed gold on a jeweled I Onta .. io. the Protes1a11t J>ftl't of Cant~dn, i$ far more intolerant
ca·own. wHJ'm, and p1·cjudiced tow.wd~ Catholics: than is Quebt!t, the Catholic part
And welcome i\!i the stove on n of Canada, toward:s Protc:stants.
e hilly moan'?
A hnrbicgcr of h:=tppines.s,
lcngc bold
Now let. us ~ uppose fot· a moment that n:, ~r cent or the people
n ehal- of Jl'clnnrl belonged to some P1otest:mt org :m i~atio n, would they have
u C~ttholic President?
'l'o forget uoubles. or worldly
cm·es, and old
Grievances nnd wordcs, or tomot··
row's pnlrt, then cry
IJt glee when noting such joy in
the ~ ky.
--<\>­MY
BED!
(A Boarder'• Blue•)
Six feu long of tirnbe.1·
To hold my wea1·y boni2S
It !eaves me quite limbet·
ACt~:a- an$wcdng telephones!
Four Ceet in width or g irth
To tOll;!'\ tu·ms and legs about­It
may not be a lower be .. th
BuL it sure iR plenty RtOut.
Two feet high nbove the floor
I flout ns in the sky!
Another bed could no mon:
Be loved thnn thil'! by J.
MARINA Lu NASA
DAILY MASS
FOR
PEACE
AND
F.XAM';; !
Let us suppose t.hat the people or Fl'ance 01· Italy were aU mem·
hers of the same Pt·otestant faith, would they have e l:!c:led a Jew tor
President ot· Prim@ Ministet·?
11 95 Jhla· tent of the men in Sou th Amet'iea belonged to the:
Masonic Ordea·, would they have elected a C;1tho:ie, D non-Mason
P1·esident?-Out· Sunday Visitol'.
Of Age Now
Laura Loui~e Sko.kcy '-t7
I am grown up, they tell me. now
And thete are thingi:i thnt I !Should know.
I have sct?n a cruelty in bea uty ~
I have ptayed nnd my C)H~Is htwe been tentful ;
L bavc learn'd of costs, of loss, of duty;
And too, 1 have found that love is painful:
Is th<we mon~?
Axis Falls! Pease Declared !!
\Vhnt it that were to leap at you from the front pngc of tomor·
~·ow'$ pnpe1·? You would go dc.Hghtedly mud umid thoui:iSlnds of mBd·
men-your voice would be lost among thousands of voices c1·ying their
joy- your heart would be saying with thous.nnds of other hearts, "He'~t
coming back- he's coming back!''
Are you pt•aying for that headline? Don't people pray Cor the
things they want most'?- not just a few minutes at night, and a few
thoughts now and then- that's not enough. is it.. Iot• so big a thing?
No tim<t1? You've heal'd chat the busiest. people in the wo1·ld hovt
the most. You won't have time fol· anvthina- unless vou take it. You
There Ought To Be a Law Against This
By DAISY WELCH, '4!;
'Tis SJlring &nd
boid.s is choipi ng
in de t rees and
de nir smeHs
wil de poi!ume
of tulip3 :1nd dnff).•dils
Ah! but before
we m--e canied away
by such e levntodng thots
we interrupture youa· t•evei11e
to tell you dat
gee ! it's romantic
nnd de boids are
on de wing again
No! de wings a•·e
on de boid
The1·e Are Only Eight Studying Days
or you' lJ have to
cram facts, figures
and fra~ zl e-d azz le
into your weary noggin'
the night befot·~
the day aile•·
that al'e bound to
appear on those
tiny neatly lyped
worry-producing
health and heart b .. enking
exam pnpers
or that you were now
relaxinj.! in $Orne fox-hole
on !iOme desert isle
or
that you were out in
the wide wide wot·ld
reclining in a S"\\-.}vel c hah-in
)'Out· own office.
Til Examinations
and we warn
advise and beg you
to study now nnd
avoid the •·u.sh
when you will s it.
ne1·vously in the t·oorn o! doom
chewin' viciously on your pt.:ucil
prayin' furiously !or divine t•c.velation
on the answ<!l'$ to the $G4 q uestions
white you frantically wish
that a messenger
would drop in to t his
Inner Sanctum with,
•fGreetings {rom Uncle Sam"
telling you that
you had been drafted
or that you were visiting
the White House showing
l\11'. Pa-esiden t the type of
problems ond questions
the youth of todoy
have to a nswe.a·
and you vehemently proc-laim
There Ought To Be a Law Against This
Art Department
Forms Club
You Can't Get Away With It
The Art Departme nt has come
into its own! Up to t his school­year
it has been but a J>lan. The
~·egistl'ation of six new student.s,
however, has made it a reality.
Many more new students art! ex­pected
in the fall, and when they
anive they will be. allowed to join
the newl)• fol'med m·t club. Clalled
1'The Thumbtack."
At a recent meeting, the otllcel'lS
for H)44·45 w~te elected: Doris
Dierdorf, Pre~idcnt; Madeline Nu·
dtclli, Viee-Pt"esident; and Loi1;
Capozzi, S c e •· e t a r y-Tn~a5urer.
Monthly meeth1gs will be he ld and
tours or gullet·ies nnd exhibits will
be at'l'anged.
Sister De Sal<!s, Pl'ofessor l.ong,
Doris Die1'dod and Madeline Nu.
citclli attended the Enstern Arts
AM-sociation Convention in New
Yotk Cit.)1 during East.er Week. lt
wn!i held at the Hotel Pennsyl.
vl\nia from April 13th to April
15th, during whit h time many in~
tere~;tin~ nnd educational lectures
and demonstrntions were given.
WISE WORDS?
Thca·e is no ea8y answer to Bri­tain'$
lndia problem and we should
be tole.rnnt and i·~stra i ned in ou1•
judgment. or what she is !oreed t.o
do there. The moment Gandhi dies
he changes from a man to a 3ain t
and l shudder in feal' that his
death may bring on the bloodiest
uprising in India since 1867. He.
is an astute politician and at the
same time a gl'ent reJigious leader
and so one never knows which side
o! his nature may be dictating any
move. The Mobammcd::ms and
Hjndus hate each olher gt·eatly.
The Mohammedan de!piscs t.he:
Hindu as one might despise a dan·
gcrou.s snake. Politics in 1 ndia i&
tllv.ta)·~ governed by religion. The
two grOUP$ don'L even do businc~
togethe 1·, no1· do they interma••t·)'.
Of C0 UI'$e all peoples $hOuld be
free, but the problem is not just
thnt simple in lndin. England has
made many mistakes, but in gc;n ..
eral her gvvernment has been
good. Some of us in America are
taking too much to OUl'!!elves in
Bt·itain•s India problem. Statement
by Or. D. Wibon Mac:Kini•Y• su­pt!
rintendent of Finch memorial
ho~pital al Wuhing ton Stille c:ol­lea:
f!, who haa apcnl aix yea.u in
India.
The freshmen entertained the
sophomore class at a skAting J)Br­ty
held on the Stone Street Rink,
Thut-sday n.fternoon1 Apl'il 22.
Helen Mu,·rer wus the Genet·al
Chairman.
Nevea· do anything for the first
time which you're not supposed to
do and which you never have done
be:fo1·e. Take my 'von! for it­you're
alwl.lys caught. Take NAncy
and me, for instance. \Ve had been
pedect angels since clnsses began
in Scptcmbca._wcll·lll, anyway. as
nearly angels as one can be, with­out
actuaUy SPl'OUting wings and
sporting a halo.
A11d then ca.n1e talk about '"eut­ting"
c lasses. H s.t:!em!> that tight
he.t·c. within our venerable hnJI$,
it was being done on n SCJlle hith­erto
unimagined. TAlk about tight·
ening the rule floated about us at.
every turn. But of course, it didn't
concern us, We had always keJH.
at a saie distance fl'om the in~
ll'ingement of any rule. Our seli­csteem
g a·ew by leaps and bounds.
This waili just beginning to make
us 1·eatize what good Jitt1e gil·ls
we hnd always been.
They say thnt t.he powet of sug.
gerstion is s trong . We ll , whatever
it wns that caused it, we still don't
know. But it was Fl'·iday - you
know, the day which always isn't
quite all here. since we are a ll
looking forwaa·d to that nice &Jeep
we can get "tomor1-ow morning."
And it wasn't. as if we'd planned
il. It just happtmcd. Like this.
Quite unexpectedly, the whole
clas~ was Jet out of ehem. lectut·e.
Fift).' whole minutes just th1·own
at us! Well, Nanc:y had a h ead ~
ache. And f hadn't had any sleep
!or two weeks ( thanks to our his ..
tory assignme nt). Quite natural·
ly, we both headed for a nice nap.
That wus a ll right.
\Ve mtpped io1· fifty minutes.
That was 0. K.
But then came that ominous
warning-the be11. We were due
in rt e lnss. But we we re also quite
eom{oJ't.able, thank you. Um·mm,
felt almost like the atmosphe t•e in
Tennyson's the Wtut.·Eatcn. So
drowsy ... and it wasn't as i£ we
wm•ft "cutting" f o1• n<1 rf'!a~on nt
all . . , we both !elt quite ill , , ,
and we had been so good since
Septembcl' . . . never had cut a
clatss . .. and since everyone else
was doing it, why, we would be
praet.ic.ally e ntitled to one c.ut.
We didn•t bud~te for nnothel'
fifty minutes. And such is the
il'ony of life, that our consciences
wca·e perfectly c lear. Blissfully
peacc:Cul1 we wet·e, as Horace
\vould put it, "carpe .. ing the diem."
Came the next bell, and, nicely
l'efreshed, we sighed and set out
fot' the locker toom.
"Where have you kids been!"
Thi:s from one of ou1· fellow cla.~ . ­l'nlltes.
''Why w~ren ' l you two in
elass?" This from another.
"The dean eame in-she look
the names of nlJ the girls who
weren't in class • ·"
\Ve laughed. Of cour·se, the}•
we1·e only tl-yi ng to scare us. But
we WCI'Cn't go;ng tO be taken in
by il.
But it was true-as we soon
found to ou1· grent discomfiture.
It seems that about fHty percent.
of lhe class had taken that vet·y
occ-asion to follow suit.
Yes - take my word for it­you're
always caught.
MARY LOMBARDO, '46 _,___
Frosh Entertain Big Sisters
The Juniors we1·e the gu ests
of the Freshmen at thcil· u Big
Sister Banquet," Monday, ~fay 8.
The banquet was held al the
B•·ook-Len Country Club at 6:30
P.M.
Nancy He1·ron wns Ronortu')'
Chairman of the banquet. and
Cynthia Smith was the General
Chairman. The assisting chnirmen
were: publicity and reservations,
Maureen Hem·y: decorations, Et ..
eanor Malone)' ; invitations. Joan
Pu1·eeU: programs, Alice Foley.
Why Journalists
Die Young
"The lYJ)Ogrnphical e.rror is a
!l!JiJll>ery t hing and sly,
You can hunt till you tn·e diny,
but it somehow wm get by.
Till the fo1·ms are off l he pt'es.ses
lt is stl'angc how still it keeps ;
It shl'inks down in a corner. ~tnd
it neve1· .stirs or peeps,
That typographical error, too
small fo1• human eyes;
Till the ink is on the pap~r. when
it JtrOws to mountain size.
The boss he stares with horror,
then he grab!' his hAir and
gl'onns ;
The copy reader drops his head
upon his hnnds and moans­The
1'COHtinde 1· o! the issue may
be clean as cl<!an clln be,
But that typographical error is
the only t hing you see."'
-The Tdnity Time-5.
Teacher (wal'ning her pupils
against catching cold): " I had a
little brothet• seven years old. and
one dny he took his new sled out
in the snow. He caught pneumonia,
nnd three days Jatc1· he died."
Silence (or ten minutes. Voice
from the. rear: uwhcre's his sled?"
~----
"Can any one tell me,'· demand·
ed the 6ery ot·ator, Hwho did most
in the nineteenth century to raise
the working class?"
"Yes," a·eplied one of the crowd,
" the inventor of alarm clocks.''
There'll Be a "Big Time" At the Sagamore Saturday Night
The Senior Bllll will be held in
advance of Conune.ne:ement exer·
cises this year, and is seheduled
for Sulurday, Mny 18. The dance
will be from 9 to 12 on lhc Sun·­ligh
t Roo( of the Sagamore Hotel
with Jim Dennis and his Ol·che~tra.
The Seniors will hold t.heil' formal
banquet at the hotel just before
the dance.
Jean Teddy is General Chair·
man of the danec, with Helen
Hammond as honoa·ary c.hai.rman.
The committees include: a•·range­ments.
lnmc Paolone and Shirley
Woodman; invitations, Mal·ion
Koenen, Mm·y L~h. Mary F.
Neidet• and Edna Sol·endo; pub·
licity, Helen Macchia, Virginia
Sullivan and Erica Klemen$; or­ehe:
stra, Virginia Could, Avril
Cochrane and Elclen Dot-chak; l'd­ception,
Betty Dooley, Jane Kreek·
e l, Cathel'ine McCarthy, Pat Good~
win and Ag: rte~ M urt.ha; programs,
~lary Jane Schwartz and Marion
McNally; deeorations, Dorothy
O'Malley, Dorothy Kelly, De Verde I Foley, Ann. Comfort and Rut.b
Lorcmo: a.nd Rita Meyer. CHAIRMAN JEAN TEDDY
4
Pat Barry, '43, I
Active USO Aide
I
Tho Clea.ner print• the follow·'
ing letttr •·ecelvcd by Slxtcl' Rose I
Marie o£ our fntulty from Pa- :
tricia BatTY '43 who i• now work- ~
ing as a USO nid•.
We hope tbat t\•eryone wiU
eatcb the opirlt of ~~~ .. Barry'o
Apostolic xeal and imitat-e it.
"iftar Siater.
··This is such a at. ... nge job,
eipecially in thiJ llu.le Aouthem
town. People do often SA)' •WhRt
do you get out of lt1' True, thote's
not mueh viaunl sut.i&fuetion. Yo ut·
hours al'e long'-"ometimel!l twelve
or more dRily. The weather is un­believabb
hot. You cannot adhere
to a rigid &ehedule. Every plan
must be flexible and cap•ble of
change on a moment's notice. You
•re called \IJ)On to do an)"lhing
and evt-rytbing from r1Hhing an
acddent victim 30 rnllea to a hos·
pit.al to stopping tloodft, and an·
nihilating e:wn•·mt of bees! You
hnve no tinu~ to c"ll yout• own:
you 're thankful for nn hour in
which to eat nn uninterrupted
meal. You drop Into bed and hope
that just oee night no one will
rouse you to inqutre where one
might find a night'• lodging. You
tn~ to k~p your pink, blue. and
white clothes elwa)·s cleaned,
pressed and •-eady for a ha$ty
wedding.
THE GLEANI::R
Queen Virginia
Your rewu1·d liea In n sense of
nceomplishme•l l-of n job well
done. You grow to know the beau­ty
of a sincet·~ 'thnnk you: the
joy of an hour'11 1olitude. You
wonder whJ.t you have IM!en doing
aU yoar previous Hfelime--when,
you merely tltou1hl you were bUS)'.I
or weary or happ)•! You're im- ~
measurablr grateful for e\~ery
book you have read, for e-'•ery play
you ha\'e seen-in t ho•·t )'Ou draw
upon each ex.,ericm•e, upon cwery.
thing you hnvc lcnrned, upon an
yout· thoughs ond emotions, ns. a
bu""iness nwn d•·nwa UJlOn his bank
ac:eount. The grN\let your own re­sources,
tb~ greater your contr-i-
Blord, lo,;oely Virtrinia Could re ianed aa queen of the c:ampu.a on
May Oa.y, May 8. Her blond beauty waa enhanced by her white aown
faahioned with hooped .~ir t a nd batque tdfe t& top with marquiaette
yoke. She wore a lia,-a of pearl with •houldu lon J'Ih voil .and abe c•r·
ried a white bouquot..
bution to those you 15fr\'e. Th b C II "
You ... beouty whc« you hav• " I'm Working My Way roug o ege
ne\·er seen it ~fo•·~-in a shadow
on an inky hake. in a moment's
silence at t..be end of a d11y, even
in the dull unifo1•mity ot an Arm)'
post.
Since my lol't. lcU~H', I was priv­ileged
to wltnctcft the BRI>tism or
my secretary, 1 wt\8 godmother­and
didn't h•ve to wor1·y about
dropping the baby! The- reverence
and devotion with which abe read
the profeuion of foit.h 11ent little
thrills racing O\'tr me. Oorolh),S
husband. Father )foore. and I
were the only onu preiSent at the
ceremony late one Saturday eve­ning.
The ba•·c little 1-oom. the
chaJ>el, teemed f!Uddenly very love ..
ly in the candle light while the
2olemn wo1·da uttered by our con·
vert seemed. once »POken, to group
thelll$elve~ all around us. I couldn't.
help but wish that C\·~ry adult
might witn~u auch a seene.
Pie~. remember me to all the
~i&ters, espccial))t the Dear Desn.
PATRICIA BARRY.''
Jean Teddy hns announced that
iL t€!tt will be he ld !or the Secre·
tnrial De1uu·tnicnt. Jnnc Lally i.s
chairman or th~ tea. which will be
an adieu to the Senlon.
Said Charlea Kinlr.'ley, f•mous
playwright: "We act u lhougb
e:omfort and luxury we.·e the chid
requirements of lift. when all that
we need to mnke \II really happy
i.s someLhing to be enthusiastic
about/•
GCtorgc BcriHU'd Shnw: H'fhc
secret or being miecrable is to
have leisure to bother about
whether you art hnppy or not-."
Mark Twain: .. Alway$ do right.
This will gratify oom• ~pie and
astonish the rest.''
By KAY CUTLER, '40
The old "I'm worki!'lg m)' way Not quite so C)'llieal were the
through college" routine used by girl ecout leaders and t-he JHLri~h
so muny mag11zlnc JSUiesmen seemt WOI'kcr who intended to so settle·
to be di81l J>ItCtLrin~ from t.he Amer .. ment wot'k nnd social l'Chnbilitu·
ican scene, but rl ut·in,(:' its hey-dRy Lion a ftcr their college cou1·su
that pathetic I!Ob•$tOrY pro't·ided wcl'e completed. Girl~~; engaged in
n1aterial to•· most of the country's light factor)• \\Ot·k seemed to be
gag-" rite.-. and radio comedians cogni1ant or the !att Lhat they
It wu funny, yes. but it contained we~ doing what the)' could to
a great deal of truth. Many of our help the war efl'ort. rather than
ambitioutt. ind~pendent young col· lfl':kinK any personal compensation
1~$rt ~tudc.nt.s do pan~time work to from their t.ask, although one tuch
help pa)• theh· way through school. worker pointed out the neeeuity
They nrt di&eovc•·ing cady in life of bein:r flblc to work with em·
the jo)• of being nble to ~A>' "1 d id ployc~t if you would ~ucc~sdu ll)•
it myself." All r~n Cl<CCutive PO·ition lJ8 !fhC
ln n tHJt'YC)' conducted recently plnoned to do.
M Natal'eth College it was deter· The nggt•cgnte time thef.lt 6lU·
mined that a lnrge ()ercentage of dent8 1pent in outside work
pupil! did work outside o( school Amounted to quit! a. bit. Whfn
or the ten dHTerent types o( OCCU• tbe wol'ldng week of the di .. h
pations tepreHnted, clerical wotk wuher was balanced aR:ainst that
ted all th~ ~•t in popularity. ap- of the telephone operator. and the
JUOximattl)' 39q- or the girls were time card of the (actory "orker
engaged in office "ork, and about compared with that of lhe pla)'•
half of that numbc1· were planning g'l'ound di1-ector it was found thl't
to make it thch· life work. ln thi! ench of them 8V<li'Rgcd eleven and
field, more thnn In any other rep· 1-t hnlf houl'a of work n week.
t•esentcd on the <tuet:~tionntli •·e. •·Ah/• you say, "mnrv(llou•!
st.udentt~ wet•(+< fll1insc pogitions thl•t ~ hows what our American
which coincided with their college boys nnd girls can do. But-and
courses and provided practical ex·, it'a a blc "but"-do they han•
perience to aupplement the theor· time to atudy too! Can they work
eHeal knowledJe ,-ained in e:lag... to help the war ~tfort to f\nante
rooms. their college edu("ation. and &till
Next on the list, nuntericaJly, b&\'e time and energy to d~vote
was the occupation or &ales clerk. to their ouUiide assignments!''
ThiJ tntiled th~ oftite work br a The best an:;wea· to thiJ:~ question
slight nun-gin, the girls conwris. should cornc from the students
ing the unks or fl.n le:, per15onnel them&clvl.'s The average nmou•lt
muking UJl 82'·~ of the total num- of "Ludy, as computed f1·om the
ber of wo•·ket·l. ttueetionnaire, was a little ove1· 17
The jobs repL·esented in the •·e.. hour& a week. Those who worked
mainlng 29' ;- eov~red every tield outaide of school Lime managed to
f-rom dlth washer to sO<"ial \\'Ork. put in 16 houns, while- those who
The ~I"OC'kery laver. when uked if had no outside- interests ft\'eratt~d
her part-time ~eu~t!~.n toin~id_ed eig~~~en and a half ~oun... • . ••
The Local Boards
We've seen quite a few movies
lately whBt with Enster v•cation
""d n few othcl' extra hou•·s
thl'own al'ound. We've S4!Cn ttome
good ones and some prett.y-oh,
well-you know wbat w~ mcftn.
One or the best comedit1. we
think, ever to hit the ~ilver acreen
ll .. Up in Arm&" with Danny Kaye
and Dinah Shore. Really. funny
man Kaye is. in the worda of the
Hollywood bigahot&--terrif\c! His
versatility is absolutel)• att.ound·
ing. flit ability to make facea that.
Rt the situation. his ver)>' rcmnrk·
nble talent Cor "puLting over" n
11ong nt•e truly outstanding. He had
the nudienee literally "in thP
aisles" with his !;Ong t•Melody in
4 F" and in the theater lobby
acene. Take it from us it was real­ly
entertaining stuff. 11 you haven't
1-t~n it, don't miss it-it'a playinc
at one o( the local houaes this
week.
Another one we likl.'d very much
whieh we saw quite !\OI'I'IC time tiJtO
- just didn't get a 1·ound to talk·
ing about it-is j'Song of Rutteln."
It.'s t1 deeply MO\'ing love ~&Or)• act
ofT to perfection with the most
romantic: of all musie- T11chai.
kowsky'a. That S""an P•l•n Ia an
attreu to b~ reckoned with. She
plays her part of the Ru.ian cirl ..
pianist with amazing warmth,
sympathy and restraint. Her per·
formance is ~dee:t even to the
J>oint whel'e she play~ (&he doetm't
•·cn11)•) the ever-popuhu• conc:c1·to
of Tschaiko~ky. Her ruclll l CX·
J>ression.s here a•·e 1\UJU!rb. Robert
Taylo1· plays the young Ame1·ican
tonductor who Cnlls ;n lovt with
her. Though hi_s performance
d~•n't exactly measure up to ltiss
J)ete"'. it was well done.
We're \·ery tired of watching
Rita Hayworth walt:& through J)iC·
t.ul"el in strapless gownt . If Ahc
could act. that. mtgbt ~avr her.
llowevct•, one point in het• favot•
Is hct· dancing. ( 1\ "Cove1• Cill'l"
we became ve.•·>~ bon.otl with her
wnrdrobe, but~ oh. how we liked
Gene Kelly! That boy can execute
dante steps! The co!o:a wtr~ ab·
1oluttly gorsteous.. The mu:slc wu
excellent--especially the aonr that
everybody is ~inging now, hl..ong
Aro and Far Away,.' E\'t Arden
tu•·ncd in a very good perlor1n·
nnte in he1· role of thc fa~t talk·
lng, wise..CI'UCkiJlg SC!Cl'CUH')'.-J.C, ---------
to get by" or uonly mJ much n, I
have Lo." One discoui'Rged llludent
remnrked that she spent "innum­erable"
hours at her atudte..
Othen une\·er kept count .. or \'A·
rit'd the amou.nt of Lime
F1-Gm a pe:rtl!al of the- anawers
to the-se questionnaire~ Yle can aee
that \.he American collef(e student
i11 doing his best to sec ur'(~ nn cdu­t"
lion nnd n:t the snme time I'Cmnin
tinnncinlly independent ns [Ill ' na he
It' nb1c. He is wot·king !or \'ictory,
working to put himself tht•oup:h
athool and at. the same time ketp..
in~ abreast of bas st udie~.
Visitors-A Menace
By MARY C. WHEELAND, '47
It should not hnpJ>en to a dog.
I do not believe it does. (Of eouroe
I do not know (t tnlking dog bu~
just b)' obse1·ving theil' wny11 I
have come to this conclusion. Just
like a detective, don't you think!)
But ic. does happen to the always­plagued
.. with • aomethinJ human
being. And what om I talking
about! Why. I am talking about
the ''bustle and bustle" ~•used b)•
tbtt forewarned arrival or com ..
pan)•. Such commotion as Is caused
i3 terdble to witne". The house·
hold which is lO be hono1·cd with
the nrrival or gue3t.a just escapes
a nervou$ b1·e$k·down while try­ing
to make the house look like • '
palace. The gueau can not compli·
m~nt the result brought about by
this strenuous labor be-cau~e then
the host.HS would avspeet t.hat·
they know that the hou.se does not
always look ._,. nitt.. (They have­had
the $.8me experience, no
doubt.) But the work only begins
with the. coming ot the g-uc&t3 and
the household is in the !tnte of
smnic until their depnrtu•·e. When
guests dep3rt thin$r& •·cturn to nor­mal
and the du•t bc~elna to collect
ao as to be ready for the next
guests.
Although the rueat who warns
the lu~lry pe-ople Lh•t he ia comintt
is a menac~. the untxpec:ted vlsl·
tor is one to be d1·eoded mosL He
is the one who "dropt" In when
t.he house looks I'ClHI)' fo1· t Jwing
clea ning but the "rlctu• little wom·
nn" has not got. around to it yet.
As the hosteS8 gr~eta thl" vititor
the dirt on the window teems so
thick that it could be shovelled off.
The t:unain rod~ Ktm to ug un­der
the weight or the t upposed·to-­be
white curtains atUI .. ted with
dust. There seemJ to be a ,~err
1-light difference between the­amount
o£ dirlln yot.u• vi(.lo1·y gat­den
nnd the amount. thau. Jl'lenm~;
up at you hom the tlom·. You
opologize for the 8JlJ)COI'IH\Ce of
the house and Lhen leL the g·uut
carry on a monologue berau~e you
are too embar-ta.!$ed to a~ak. Re-­ceiving
such a cool rt.'~tptlon. the
unexpected \'i~itor does not stay
tong. It ~eems like yeana to the
host.e&S who hasn't a thing in the
house t.o eat Rnd !ears that that
gue~t i!J going to at.ay !or dinner.
When the guest. leaves, only the
tonible pnin cnuscd by JlOisoning
keeps the hostcu f1·om committing
fluicide.
I ha\•e a little slttn which keepl
comp:tn)• away It reads, ... keep t
• .w: .. ao a hobby. Pita·• OJI<'n the c
door s!owly or you might hurt a c
snake. •• Not many people like
snakes. Neither do I 31)• tign with
its little white lie mny be help Lo 1
all you who al'e t ubjert to a gl'eat
deal of compnn)'·
Fath;;:~ ti;e to get e
up.''
Mothe.1·: HWhy, dur?"
Father: uThe baby hu jwt
!allen asleep."
DANCING UNDER THE BIG TOP There Is Such Faith
B!• BETTY FILLER, '47
I was j\lsl thanking my luck)·
~tims thQt I'd gotten Lhrough my
exnms and hadn1t had to stav on
Cot• the summ<!r ~eason wh~n l
I'Calizcd thnt I had been lying on
the lawn fo1· over nn hour. So
many of the othe1· fellows had
Hunked out thnt I had had my
doubtl\ whet.hel' )'Ours truly got
th1·ough the last tct·m. b~cause the
woa·k was getting toughe1·. 1 hud
f ully decided to abandOI'l medicine
if I had failed nt Yale. It haJ)pcned
that I was one of the I ucky ones
who came thr·ough with fairl)1
good marks.
The first night in Maine is
always wonderful. Even though
we've been coming here every
$Ummer since Gwen and I we re
in school. it. still l'eta ins it.!s charm.
After Dad had called me several
t imes, J arose lazily and went in.
My far..het· i$ one of those peotJle
wbo like promptness in a ll things_,
even in getting up to go fishing.
He also realizes my lack of the
virtue.
The queena of the Junior c lau were crowned a! the c:la.a' "Bi.r Top Hop," Saturday, April 22 . T!o,e Abo\•e th e noisy blare of the
queen• elected by tbo Ju_p_ior elau a.re Mary Ade laide Burna and Virsrinia Klce. Bouq uet& were pre· radio, l heal·d the r iot.ous laught@r
by Joan Oue~n, chairman of the dance. of the feJiows inside, J ohnny, Lon
l'h . . . . and the Micha els - along with
-e gym waa decorat ed w1th atufft~d an• mal., and mus1c wu provuied by Bob L.ng and his orche.stu. Mom, Dad and Gwen. ' Valking
Joan Dug-an and Jean F lanaga_n were genen.l cha..irmen. The assiatinr chairmen included : deeora. 0 \'Cl' to the table , I took 8 piece of
Doris DieT·do,.r; entert.ainmcnt, Virg inia KJee; publicity, Marilyn Moore; orchutra , Cla.ire Ellen ! chicken, and Gwen $trolled O\'t!r
'"''' •••nan; patrons, Be tty Kee,.an and Ma rtha Sheedy; arrangemen ts, Pat O'Cndy; tickeh, Be tty Oris- t.o me . "Row's it feel to be able to
and Lois Stoller : r -e freshments, Margie Kraus and Te rry O'Connor. tclax agAin, Bob?, 16] tJS g\'eat
"Barn Dance" was held
evening, April 27, b~·
in the gym.
c hnlrmnrl \\'it!S Ruth
und
Marie Leinbe1-ger;
Foley; Reft·eshments,
; Publicity, Mary Ann
De-corations, El'icu Klem·
CJean UJ), M~u·y 1\Jarsr Ke llick.
Music was pro\Tldcd by Fa·nnk
Ea1·1's 0 1·ehestra. r Miss Betty Keegan added to the
~,·ening with two solos-.. Let Me
all You Swcctheru·t" and "\Vhit.e
Cliffs of Dover" whieh t•eceived a
hea•·ty OJ)plause from he1· (ellow
Soda lists.
The Virginia Reel nnd Square
dancc3 were not t Aken in by the.
studenU; alone, but the facult)'
a lso joined in. which made the C\'C­ning-
a ~real deal of f\m.
bein.Jr home. but I kind a miss Bud;
it. seems as though only hal! of me
Scholarship Winners is he•·•· and the other bali in that
(Continued f1·om Page 1) hospii.Jtl with him." J was ju3t
thony of Pad \13 liigh School. Sy,·a. waiting, I gue~s, for the chance to
euse, $400 ($100 per :'r'ea1• for four llllk about Bud - tmyway, G·wcn
years). knew. s·hc listened. "You know,
l\ltu·garet Murtho of Mt Mel'cv Gwen, he's one of the grand'-"&t.
Academy, Buffalo, S400 ($100 pe;. fellows I've eve1· known, but he's
year tor foUl· years), certainly ha\'ing a tough time of it
Matjo1·Ie Es·therheld of N'azar- now. It's hard to mnke him out
Clh Academy, Rochester, $400 sometimes, lhough. It s <l e m s
($100 pe1· yeaa· {0,. four ye.ns). s.h'llngc that an intelligent te11ov ..
Helen O'Darcy of 289 Wabtlsh hke Bud should put so mucb stock
Avenue, Ke"lmOI'e, and n SC!nior l in thi~ roligic>us hltahu•ky. But J
I Th w· d student at Mount St .J oseph Aead- have to admit thnt he doesn't try n e I e \-Vorld cmy, Buffalo, i~ the winner of the to convert all or us to hi• beliefs,
By DAW:-.i HEALY, '4& SSOO Mu$ie Scholarship for '"hich and that's somet hing in his: ftwor."
n cornpetitive examination was "WeH, I neve1· knew Bud us we!J
taken in Mna·ch. Marr J-osephine u tsome of the fellows. you know,
Anot hCI' N. c. g irl doing big Miller of Canandaigua. and Q but. ht didn't nffeet In@: U5 one or
things rol' the wua· cfl'ol't-Dett~· Senior student at c. A h~s been those 'holy J oes'.''
. R. Professor Gives Talk C1 iffin llnrry '33. a succes• in th• owllrded the $800 Art S~hola•·ship, "Oh, he isn't, at all t~nt w•y. Al J (Continued [rom Pnge l ) field of psychiata·ic :social y,·ork, for whieh exhibits were I'>Ubmitted least., he doesn t show it o utward .. l hus taken an executive position on April 15th. ly But I 1 cmembC:I' when we were f:e truth thnt ma"l is doomed to with the local Red Cro!s Prom - · just 1dds and a bunch o! us werf.'
abol' with his hands; Secondly, t-~cw M('xico it h:-ts been •·epoJ·ted H~l-e is a lette-;:--;\b";;h:m Lin- t Amping up in the woods; theJ'C
t!~e South Ameritun'~ dhdiko Cor ~ eoJn wrote to Mn.jor Ramsey: we1'e sevct•o.l CathoHes ~md Pl'O·
on·.•cntion Amuslng was his stor.v that Mn~)' L. Bennett is doing E-xecutive Mansion h!1tants. too, but Bud was the only
medica.! ~;ocinl work !or the slate October 16, 1861 one who got up Sunday and ,-..•ent
(the South American opera.goer My dear Sh·: ~o Chtll"eh But I guess everybod)•
ho du1·ing inte.,rniss:00 time OS· Wedding bell$. nt·~ r inging, hrt\Te Th(> lady beal'er of this sal'S she has his own ideas on the subject.
cntatiou.dy ri:;eR r1·om his seat. in been t·inging and from all indica· has two sons who want to wot-k. I ! told him that he'd outgt•ow his,
he t hird row in t.he OJ'(:hc$tn:t and tions will continue to 1·inJl: for the S~t. them at it. if J)O~sibl('. Want· ; and he ju!t. laug hed it otT"
urning to the audience, fixes. hi! Alumnae. Jane Bauman Lavery
p~rn g lusses on some blushing '40 has left with her hu!'iband to
amsel and st-ares away to his stat·t housekeeping in 'foronto
ing to work is so J'B1·e n want that " ls there ttnythincr seriously
it 1;houl(l be encouraged. wrong with him. Bob?"
Yout"s truly, HThe doctors don't seem lo be
A. Lincoln. able to di4gnose it nny better thnn
had fled. when my thought.• had
turned to nly fr iend.
After getting in bed, the nag­ging
thought kept going t ht·ough
my mind thnt llud wa.sn•t going to
be 0 . K. by the end of this week
01' any other week. In a moment
of anguigh and sudden fear, I
dropped to my knees by the bed
nnd silently begged God, or what.
ever highe1· powers there were1 to
have things come right !ot· Bud.
The d1'iving fca1· seemed to sub·
side aftet· this action, and 1 slept
soundly,
The next da~;r. the weather was
made to ordet; Mom said they bod
ordc•·ed it ahead fol' me~ and 1
ttlmost believed her.
My t.a.n. which I had lost dudng
the wintu, returned to me and J
got in a lot of swimming and flsh·
ing. We entered our sailboat, "The
Elder Brot.hcr," and she came in
fil'st. But none of these activities
held much interest. for me. i\·tom
looked wot·t·ied because J was wor­l')
o'ing.
One J'llorning at. br·eak!ast, she
reached for my hand and said,
.. Bud, dcat·, ( wish you•d stop wor­a
·ying; you've pn s..~Sed your exams
and now you'"e t e.n weeks ahead
of you to relax."
''l'm noL wot·rying about s<:hool,
Atom; that'$ nevet· been my pol­i
c~·. "
" \Ve kne>w that, but we were
just hoping that those frowns we1·e
thC! be~ i 1win g of a re!ol'mation in
you,'' Dad put. in.
' jl can't seem to get Bud off m~'
mind."
"La::;t. summe t·, it was a twenty.
yea1· old blonde you wet·e in love
wit.h. l don't know which ill worse,
your love.·sickness or you.t· con­stunt
wonying/'
"No, Dad, t his is serious; Bud's
been going down fast in the lns l
few months. If he could have t...'lk­(
01"1 tim(l oiT .-nd t•ested, ha might
have been all l'ight, but he wanted
lo get his term completed. Now,
he's r isrht down in bed and who
knows when he'll be up?"
Later, I took the tar down to
the st.n.tion and had the em· fi lled.
While I was waiting, I got out o(
the c:ur. Being out of cigarettes, I
decided l'd bette~· get ~;,om~- it
wouldn't do , both fot· me and my
nerves. to have to dt·i .. •e all the
way to New York with nothinSt to
smoke
As J wa.s slipping nlong the high­WU)'
again. all pro .. •ided fo\', it
stat·ted a·aining htll'd; J could bat·e­ly
tsee the t'oad ahead o-r me. I
slowed the car a little. but the
vi ·ion was still tenibly hazy and I
had been dxiving so long that I
couldn't trust m)>' eyu muth long­er.
l ncal'ly fell asleep se\Ttwal
time~ at the wheel, but finall~· I
turned the radio up until it blared
(Continued on Page 6)
.cart's content. The thh·d point, Catherine ilhlrl\s1 '36 is now ,...--------------.1 a green bunch of fi rst·aiders.. It
•·· Canfield stressed in ail •••·ious- ltl"$. Angus lluchan. The lovely FAVORS . TROPHIES makes me b u•·n ; his P!ln.>nts h!lve
I
had :;pecialist Hfter specialist, and , ---------- --
ness - tbat is, pe~·!onalization wedding took place April 11. CLUB JEWELRY they all go awn}", not knowing any
SCHOOL and COLLEGE mote than when they came u he's JOSEPH J . \'Cr-1\us socialization. The South Peggy Meca·c '42, wc:Jl-known
fremin Mission Unit P1·es.ident
during her senior yea 1·. is to be a
May bride. Good luck. Peg! We
wi ~ h we were you.
merican will think in terms of
he individual ; we at-e inclined to
be grc-ga.rious, to work in g roups,
nd organizations. 'l'hi$ one point
is at the bottom or aU the political
trouble found in the S. A. republic
1
The South Ame t•ican is pl'one to
act. and react purely as nn individ­ual
•·egardless of t.he g-roup.
o... Canfield concluded his talk
\\'ith a fitting tribute to OUJ' South
me.rican neighbors as being ex~
client. good neigbbOI'S; J)C.OI)]e Of
fair mind and generous heart,
nd nbove all :_t vet·y good·hum.
red people. Dr. Canfield's deep
no\•lledge of th~e peo)lle comes
with years or experienee with
them, having made many tOUt"$
1$0\tth o! the border." Be has .. v-ril-
~l~ n several books of geat inte•·est
o u.s. especial1y to studen ts of
panish language.
lnst ) '(H'Lr'!l May Queen, lovely
Jo)'Cl Loftus, will reign ngain
fter wedding is scheduled for
May 31.
RINGS not out of the hospital by the end
of the week, I'm going down to BUCKLEY
The Metal Arts Co. New York to see him. Well. <is, 1
Inc. think I'll hit the h;)Yi we have to
be UJ> e:u·ly tomorl'ow befo~·c the
742 Portland Ave. tlsh know we' re coming.''
Roeheoter, N. Y. After bidding my parent" and
"Our Representative friend• good-night, I went slowly
Funeral
Director
Wlll Gladly Call" to my •·oom. All the forme•· gnie~yiL-----------....J
Ji'JoJ·e-nc~ Rog~in '42 Rnd l<1athie 1 L ___________ _JII,-- - -----------------------;
Statt '43 were seen having A won·
de•·fui time •t Big Top Uop The .------------­Alumnae
are always very wel­come.
Rosemn1·y Scbamine '40, ha.s
been teaching in lrondeq\roit. She
will continue to teach, but begin·
ning in Septcmbet• she will be. on
Long Island.
Vh·ginia Bogdan '43, and Mon·
ica Sen•as '41, w~re on the Panel,
14Catholie Organists in Action" at
the Convention of the Na t ional
Catholic l\t usie Educat01"5 Ai;.J;oC::in·
tion. AJU'il 29. l t was the New
York Chapter that met hen~- at
TOWN TALK
BAKERY, Inc.
601 PULLMAN Ave.
Phone
Glenwood 6772
£yery Day
We Go
Your Way
Nazat·eth. IL ___________ ......J
DRINK ONLY THE BEST
Sea/test Homogettized
Vitamin D Milk
BRIGHTON PLACE DAIRY
6
~?---·-·-.............. , __ , _______ .,, __ ,_,,_, __ ,_,_, ____ ,~
! SPORTIN' LIFE I
j By DOTTIE WECMAN, '41 ~
&... ........................................................................................................................................ ~
T H E G LEA>IER
Chemical Analysis
of Women
Syn1boi- WOE.
Here h ll'· tht.' hun edition of I Med<li nJr~l' on the fac ulty team, Thought. t.o be li lnembel' or the
the C leane r that wall contain a we've 1'('Rily had to pl'actice. hunwn fttmily.
Sports _Stor)', And .maybe it's a And now it'a time to say ·•good- Atomic W~ight- Aecepti!d at
good thmg. for the g1rlw au·e all be- b)·e." h'• been great writing the:oe
ginning to abandon t.he tun in the fPCU'UI artitlea and telling what's 120. though human bsotope. var)'
gy~ for more aeno~ work- what over in the gym. But the end from 100 to 200.
ch1~fty thftt of cram.m1ng for e~~ms l of the JChool ~·ear has e:rept up on Occurre.nc~Fo\Jnd both in frtt
whach. are schedut~.d for the not us, 10 1et'a )'leld to Time. I'll be and combined $late, the lntter
too d1stant futtn·e. seeintc )>'OU next year' I ) frs. Morgnn'l gym clas!es have . uaualh• w•th men.
seen <1uite n bil of fun lately. as rhy~lcol Pt'OJ)(!J'ties-Somethno\
can be j udged from lhe lnug hter found in pu•·o ~tate, a ll eoloa-x, "ur9
:md poundln" l••ulng r,·om tho Arts Students Get Advice rneo u•unlly p1-otoctod by • mm
g-ym. They've been IQUftl't!-dRneing (Continued {rom Page l ) of lllint .HJld oi.l! Boil& ut nothing,
in prepa ration& for thl' big "Ba•·n tain ()(hhiOn.t ~ucb Ill A..ssisUtnt Li· and freezes without rea~n. An
Dance" on April 2ith that w~ bratian in Government service unpolithed JI'W>#'imen tuntA ... ~en
sponsored by tbt Sodality. Xo one which art open to Liberal Arh r-- ,.
minds attending ~t>·m tlasses when tt"aduat". in the pn;~a.ence or • highly polp
tb~ei~::r~:~~nt~:~i~o~::r:a~~- There il probably no field which l!hed one. AU varieties swe11 with
ments have been pa·actieing up on pr~!lently otrcn grenter opportun· the pa·oper treatment Oen:lit)• runs
that sport of oports-a rchery. ltiu !o•· the l.ibnal Al-ts graduate hi~h.
Quite :1 few or them Ul'C t a·uly be- [hltn Sociol Service, and in t his C'hcrnicnl Propel'tie; - rlighly
~oming CX JICI'l "hot• with !ScoreR field thcwc It' likewise a wide choice explosive, ~md dangerou§ in in<!X•
of thl·ee out of nv~ ! hOts hitt ing in t)'11C or woa·k uwdluble. Th(' llCI'ienccd hands. Possesses ga·N~l
the buli'!I--~)'C. Per11oOnnlly that's no n1nin d iVIAionR in the Social Sca·v- nlllnity for gold, silver, platinum.
place ror me. •:,·~n with prac:tit:e ice Fitld are SOCIAL CASE all pt tc:iOU$ stones. Bas the Ability
l'm afraid I'd still mi!l!ll "the broad WORK, under which may be in· I of ab~oorbing u.rilimited quantitiea
!ide or a barn." eluded F'amily Soei•l Work, Child ot ex~n!'i\'e fru.it and drink. ) 1ay
The next bl~t t\'ent it Field Day. Welfart-, )tedical Social Work, explode ~pont.a.neously v.•hen left
P~)·thlatric Social Work: SOCIAl .. alone by men. Fresh variet)• ha•
It will tak~ plact thill afternoon. GROUI' ' \'OR" h. h
Besides ha,·ing hot.. c:akes. fodge. ' a, w tc to,·e~ r_ee· areat maJtnetic attrattion. Asre•
etc., to atutf yournlf with, we reatlonal and cbaraeter-bolld.ng rapid))•.
p1anned a bit of a·ccreation 50 a!§ work in ~)arks. l~laygrounds, set· UA~s--Efficient cleaning agent.
to wea1' uway tho~c excess JJollnd!i tlen;'cntJ And chtl~ C'enters, and acta fUt o J.U!i!it ive or negntivc eat·
that might be Ktli11Cd US n I'CSUJl l dunn)"C the Wlll' JJCI'I?dt U,S,Q. and 81)'1\t. in t he J)rOduetiOn Of fev~l"'t
. .. . . lled C1'0K~ a·eereauonnl cen tei""K: (h d h ) r> b bl h
of over-eatmg. I hCl·e wi ll be a blg COMMUNITl' ORGANIZ T 0" en nc •• • ro a y t o moot
baU game-the c le1·gy faculty vs:. • . A. I .. ~. powerful (bunk-ac:count.) I'Cd ucing
iiitudent&. With liuch players As wh•ch in.v~lvu the eoordmntton of -gent. known .
Father Lintz, Falber Ehmann, the actl\•ltft.!' of \'ariow social
Father llat~amara, and Father work Alfencfn in a t:ommunit)•:
SOCIAl. RESEARCH. the <Om·
pilation of facLS and st.tiuics for
There Is Such Faith the purpo,au or social planning.
and SOCIAL ADMINIST RATI Ot' ,
A priest tens the f>tOry or a
bithop who. at Confirmation, uked
the aboul-to.be-tonfirmed the U!t­ual
queat.ioM.
(Continued fron1 Page 5) the executive nnd administrative "Who nm t? And what hnvt 1
o u t n l\111 vohune. t &ta r t~d hum- dutiea in th• various ~<oc iAI work
ming some of t he aonn pla yed , ngeneit""$. An inteare.st.ing artieiC'
and before re11ll"ing a, 1 was in mighL b(• w••lttcn on any one of
New Yo1·k. these Held~. but he1'e we will eon·
CUIIIl• lU l lu ? "
hYou hnve come to imJJ0!\1 on
the II oly Ghost."
----»---
The chAp with bad eyesight. waa
examintd by the draft medie:o and
plae:ed in l·A. ••sut my eye• are
terrible." he pointed out. ... can
hardly •ee anything.''
"Look," said the doctor, "we
don't cx:unine eyes any more we
ju~t. count tbem."
j-
1 It's Being Whispered - - - - i
+------ --------------~+
"Mc:Car th" hns glven UJI 1.e~wh- ·ro all you huutiC8 who dldn'l. at·
lng 01 o ca rct:r And ~~ l hi uking tend t he J uniol' Jlvt t hink o(
~;ellou..o~;Jy or taking up P'Ythinu·)•. what rou Rli&Sed that Tieky Cian­Alk
her to psychoanalyze )'OU- nini didn't!
~rati.s. Betty J eanne Ke ller will ba\'t
\\'hat does Loui•o Beahon ha\'e many a "wind-blown" haia·do i:
that N•ncy Brown hun't! Or&$ it that shining Cuick con\'t"rtiblt
that llrs. Beahon used to accom· Johnny ju.o;t purcha ... ed.
pany Mrs Sehantz. on the pjano? Mari• 8e,.l h.aa a ne" meani.111
Claire Kane i& going to give It$• lol' the Spanish woul "te1·ne.rot• .
on• ($.60 ~r) on " llow to foil (•alve<). She cull• ~hem "llttlf
out of C.a1· Ooor&--C •·ttceftt ll)•.'• veals.''
Oirector J ean Scbant :r. .-t.uted Ge rrie Ktu•pp hn" n nume&~ke
thnt S RO rehenranls we1·c very UJ> in the Biology lob. It's u pock~
well attended tbis year. Wh)' the e t·si%ed bunny, jU!IL u few da.
~udden t-hangC!:! old olks, meet ''Ctrllt.'' 1 0 . A. Flaherty is C~tting ltttera
on the prettiest s:t.ationery with --4-
Palm Beaches and 1tutr on it. It looks like tht Fre~hmen d' •
Since the WAC Rf'Crulting it again! Ma'"1are t M ... ,. Mall
Drive. Glenn ~tiller and hia boys land Elaine Mc£yoy both receivfli
have a few new fans. So hafl Od·l rings for their hlhird fingea·, lefi
cnbnch's. J ust 1·eminh;elng! hand."
Some o! t he srh·ls nt school o1·e Who's t he sm·geant who'• bcea
quitting and <"PJ>lying for position'\ bur ning UJl t h<' U. S. mnil~ writinl
n• elevator operaton nL Sibley'~ to Ann Va lcnu? J..et u• in on it.
People going by Naztn~th on Ann.
tunn)' afternoon& mlKhL think
w~·~ ha,·ing a .. Mill:. Anl~ric:a''
con tat.
How are you eominc along with
tbe t~~o e.Migns and Will)• F"'inn,
T er ry (Riley)?
Who's starting a hope cheat wlth
one blue satin guest towel!
Much run was had OVCI' f~H~ter
vncntion, we henr. All l hc bona·tl·
et'1l went home: Dawn Healy went
to Louiliana and Laura l..oui•e
Slcalley went. to Texat- both to
at>• their brot.tu:~rh(!). Ducic. Oie.r.
dor-f and Ma.dy Nud telli v.ent to
Stw York {or several da}'". One
le.at fling before they '!ltltle d0\\"'11
to nice, bard work for the ftum­Rler!
When it comes to detenAe plant
work this !Summer, Dotty We hner
would like to go to Ten n ea~ce. Oh.
HKnk. how could you do t hiM to
her?
Did )'OU know that Mary Ann
Lane jndulges. in a gruetome pa•
timt! It's writing - not Inner
Nanctum- but th~ obit vary tOI·
umn.
"Are you t.ak;:g anything for I
your huy revel·?"
.. Yes, boxing lese~on't. I'm goln~
Fr•n Cult shouldn't. 10 tlaJthi
the picture of that h·h·ha.ndso
man. You don't know hov.~ envio
tt makt"!;; u .... FnAt.
Well, here's more of !'o:u.a.reth'
Hit Parade:
Ja.ae LaUy-lt StJH ted All Ove.
Again.
J o.anio Outr•r'l- 01e' King Col
Louise Suhon- A Kid Nom
Joe.
Alice Foley - When Johnn
Comes Marching Home.
Betty Keeaan- 1 Had tht Cru
iest Dream
Mary E•ther Oanehy· -lh· Bu
d) ..
Ginny Could-Over the Wnves.
Ma ry J eanne M•yo..-Jlm.
MAdy Nuc:itelli - •rhe 1\l usj
Stopped.
Tbe Student Rody- Oon't Gt
Around Much An).. nlore.
Greeti11gs
1t was about Lhree o'cl~k in sidel' only the Ll1PC of college
the mornin~f, JO I went direcll)· to eoul'!le, whlth otfe~ the be~;t prep­a
hotel. Before a·etiring. 1 called aration for woa·k In t he Social
the hospital: • crisp \'oice an- Work field. \\te quote !rom a pam.
swered on the olher end and Yid phlet rtcentb publi~hed by the
that Bud was re,ting comfortably. American A4t•OCiation of School$
Some da)•. 1 hope I!Ome doctor has of SociRI Work. "The best rou nda­the
time and th• inclination to tion for toclal work h! completion
enforce a Cew reforms in t he line of •m undergraduate course of
of hospita l ct.lquCltte. Also, [ hope study in llbe,·al nl'ts wi th 3 J;l'OUp
t~at he will pa·ohiblt t he pht·a::!-eS, majoa· In the ~oeial $Ciences. Since
·•resting comrortubly," ' 'doing as th~ I!Oclnl worket· is c:onc.:e1'nctl
well &Ji, can be expected" and 3 few I wi[h the whole a·angc and com))lex
othet• old ¥tand·b)'A. of tOC1al, economic. and psyeholosc·
Sect·cuu·ies Lo executives to ~Jock the fi rst ~uy who glvtM me
Bn)' advice." from
t didn't !\Jeep much that night, ital feetora wbie:h atTet"t the w~l·
Bud kept running throu.Kh mr fare and happiness of individuals.
mind. Risinl:' about th·l!' o"eloek. 1 ~uu., :mel c-ommunities. whatp
\Vatehed the !~iUn rilloe over llanhat· e\'tr contribute~ to the grov."th of
tan. Shortly after, 1 returned to understandinat and the broad~ning
bed and, not knowing that 1 hnd and dteptnin• or sympathie:s ill
slept, my eye• opened to find the peninf!nt Some co~nes relating
sun a11'endy hhch in the ttky. 1 lay to the tl('ld of 80c1al work muy
t h c r C" t"Cflectivcly, wondering nlt~o bo ~dvcn ut t he college. but
whethe1' to breok(aat first 0 1• go they 11hould be gcnernl a nd non·
immedinlely to th~J hospital ACter leth nicnl Economics, political sti·
deciding on the latter. I &howered ence, I"")'Chology and !'oeiology ll1"e I has-tily. dr~t~e-d. and bun·ied to tbe u~uafly ton•ldtnd the P~·profflc..
hotel lobby. ~ional aubj~Ut most dosely relat·
I think, at that in.!itant. 1 ex- ed to tht •ntial $en•ite rurricup
perienced one of the h.appi~l mo- tum." In thit titld as in mo~t prop
menu of m)• .-~mcmba·•nce. There, f~~lon• tht executive •nd sutx•r·
c.oming townrd me. amiling, was ViAOt')' po·ition• require graduate
Bud-Bud, lookirlg pale and wan, wo1•k, bul muny ogencies will em­but
tully ··~covered. M my tlrst ploy Libta·nl Arls gr ad unt<'s in
glance told 1n(', u u xiiiRI')' llO~titions. It ls cstimnwd
As I e!a~ped his hand,, speech- that I 0.000 pa·ofcMionally t.raincd
less, a million (tuestions1 asking workera ore needed. now, and that
bow tbi.s mir~tcle Yet miracle many more will b~ needed in the
could ha''t octUITed. ·I"U.!,hed to nt)~ po t-war e·ehabilitation period.
mind. .\nother fitld which, contrary t~
After hurrying him to m)• wait· the gent-rat opinion of college wtu­ing
t-ar and headinat for home. I dent~. tmploya many Liberal Art.a
turned to Bud and. fol' the tirst guduattl '" BuJJine!!>S, particular·
t:m~. trusttd my voite to speak. I)' the adminiJt.trative offiees of mtp
uwell, fellu, It looke like we docp tionn l indu,.tdnl conc:e1·n.$. While
toi'S 111·~m't •uch a dumb buneh , such conc:ernt oleo u!e Seea·ctarial
n ftet· all." EconomicK nnd Bus iness A<ll nin ia~
"~o doctoa· p ulled me t h,·ough , tN~tion Majors. and while Stenog­Bi11,''
said my fl'iend. l!olemnly. raJ>hy a nd Typing may be an en·
'"When I ws~ ttL my worst. the: terinst wedge to certain interestin~
mang-~t Hngtion suddenly pos- poshion•. the.-e are many position•
sessed me that •ome one or some· in whath tht Liberal Arts course
thinll ipeeial wa.t pulling on my is not onl)• valuable but n«e-qary.
side. and it pulled me right To mention 111 few, a broad general
The above suggestions do not1~-----------~
by any mean! exhau~~t tbe OJlpoa··
tunhiea (or Liberal Arts Kfadu·
•tn. but only outline a fe-w of tht
more popular fi~lds. which wet- 1
come young women with a sound I libual edue:ation. young women
wbo ore trained to think clearly
tend to fot"m sou nd j udgment.!.
YAY
Funeral Home
604 Maple Street
DWYER ELECTRIC
Have a "Coke"=A thousand miles is not too far to come
•.. o1· beitzg Jrimdly with a Cbimse cada
Chine:se Byers h ere io America for t.taiAio.g bavc found tb:at a:o ~ lm pJ c
a phrase a.s Ha#t~. "CoU" Jpak.s frieodship io aoy t·oosue~ Ea.R, west,
oonb, south, ~Cola stanc!J for t/H JNIIIS< 11>41 1'(/~ - ba..
become ch< h2ppy bond bctwttn peOple of good will.

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VOL. XIX NAZARETH COLLEGE. ROCHESTER. N.Y., :.1AY 11,1944 No.6
Liberal Arts Students Receive
Advice For Future Occupations
C. S. M. C. Units
To Meet May 18th
At The Academy
SOPHS CHOOSE BETTY CASS
GLEANER EDITOR FOR '44 - '45
Wt Prl!.;t"nt 01 th:rd tepo t by out· Platenw:u Dir(!~tor, Mi~ Eva This it the~lnlv·~ of ap_u~ude ~r intet-t:&:t- Church in l.atin-Am~dca - con��the
wa 1 e•pecialJv attracted bul reJ~:earc~. edmant!• 3 the Sophomo e Clan of N'a%a~eth eleeted Bett>• Ctu'l
cnlled "OJJJ)renticesbip .. or sampl- hbrary-~rained. perB~nJ; position§ City. e~itor-in-c~iC!C The Clellner for next year. Be ... ty, who i.s m~jcning an
inJC JH!l'iOtl in Aome tield. nre av•llltblc m vnr1oua bra.n~he!S c Homt Mill&lon~ _ to be ton- h1story, wall starL htl" Jot.ll mdl11tit dutieta next fall. The fir11t IA$U(' ot
0 0 • • • of the Gov4.'rnment. State and Fed· tluctcd by Mist.c•·~ or 0 ll'liuionlii'Y The Cleaner under hca· guidance will come orr the p~·c&&elll in October.
bvJousl~ lt. would ~e •mposslb~e e a·nl for young wom~n wi th s r>e- onter - Belly's home i~~t in Ont.twio, New
~on~~~'·c;~ 1;1 ,:11 "rtlcler of ~~11~ cinlixed t.l'Aining in Acic•H~e 1:1nd re- •1. Confce·encc on ~- SCHQLAR.SHJPS ANNQUNCED~ hhil t~ip thru_ Panan1a he spoke o( :':~~· :-r!z:!~hd~h=l~;:ta~~"~;:p~~
ion offer" man)' opportunities, t e 1mpress1ve "montnnu mu)' po~ible ...
eapceiRIIy In c:erluin subjects; rot· alta3 que se venn l'n nn'lbo._ lndos I ---·-- l'Xftnlllle, Mathcmnlits. Seicncc, The llftme• or the winner>; or the Kolesnik , or 0UJ' IA&dy or Mercy de lu c.arretCJ'8 de """""'"·" Ill• STUDENTS NAME
)fu-1ni01' rat Ntazoe·cth now, .\merif.an and vice: vcaan w1u VCI'.Y I --- •ontOilC1 tonneeted with Leae.hing, Cnthollc and public high schools of Holy F"nmil:v II Itch School; cn~rt.aining. "Ou•• id~a of the Amid the cheers for the new,
whilt the life of a t.e:aehea· is not in the llot·h~tel' Diocc~e in June, Cornin~ Denncry, Jlelen O'Leary t.ypacal South Amcric11n is of n und le"rslor the old, College tlec·
an U!\>' one. the 1-ttUdt:nt should 19;&(, have bH~n announe.~d. These of .Mt. )torriJ llfsrh School; 1-:Jmi~ dark-hait·ed, K.mooth and t;lipptl·y
1
t.ion.s we~·e held April 20 ftl Stu·
bur in mind Father Lord's wa.rn- full tuition ltthol&rjhi.,_. a.~ award- Deanery, ~Jay F.liubeth Donnf'll)' looking individual with mcnafinsc dent Hoar. The returns tam~ In
insr: ''If a career appea..ta ea"Y· dis-, ed on thr ba\iJC of scholal"$bip, of Ow~o Fret \('ath•my, Owt$[0: bl~ck e:yeo;.. a darin~t ~mile. • lont •" foll?ws:
lUst it. There i~ ~omething v.TOng leadership, pe111onality, finan~ial Cene,·a DeanNy, \tl-. 1\atherine staffiy waxed "mu"tacho."' a wide Pretndent of Undergrad: Ro"e-­with
an ea"')' career as then is cer- .uuu~. and ch•neter rffommend- .-\nne ~mhh of De Sale. Hisrh ~Qmbrero (alwayt a ~omb~ro) a mary Welc:h; Vice.Pre!4ident, Jean
tainl)' ~mething: wrong with easy ation. Tht).. "'·~re o~ered by ~ax.· &-hool. 5WMhing rt-d .. uh and b••sr)" Flanall8n: Seeretary, Eleanor lta·
money." Suctt!IS in an)• field is de· &rNh Collttrt fo1· the first time in 8f:l';id~ tht Ofan~ry Kho1anhip pants.'' "Oh" and hf' added ~mil- Ioney·:: Trea~urer, Kay Cutler.
P"(lndtnt on t.mt'! ability to work. lUll, in srrateful re~ognition of winntr!i, tho~J>Ot·tunity for con~tant de,•elop- b•·eathlessly for the South Amm·· Foley; vice-prefect, Bcvel"ly Jonea.
ment nnd odvnnc:emenl. roa· the Youl' bL·others and sweethearts arc n•t Ufl'ald ican's description or lhc Yankee. 'rhus fat• the eledion l'eturn"
per•onol satisfaction thut come• to spend days at a time cur led up in n fox- To him the typlcnl Northcl'llcr fo•· the different ela;s oniti Vice- President.. Jcnn
pie Teaching unquestionably •·~- hair iJ usually uncombed and he Sc.hantz; See1·etnl'y. Relen florey;
main" un out.standing opportunit>' The~· are afraid. though, of not coming uise, an English majo1·
urul nn honor studenL hu con­tributed
i'cverul poems to t he
CIIUJ)UII quorlcl'ly in t he past.
thrctl rem"'
Congl'atulations and good luck
in your new position, Louise!
thC! generou11 o.ul.!tance given by
the people or the Dio•••e or Roch·
estea· t.o Lhe Nu~tH·et h College
Building Fund, which helped to
mnke JlOMsible t.he erection of t.he
th•·ec fine new College buildings
on 1!:1tat. Avenue- the! Administl'ft•
tion Building, the Cymnat~ium. and
the Oormlt.ory,
The winner• Art a~ follows:
Roche!Cttr Ouner)•. .Min Elaine
petitlve examination!!! we••t t~ISO
annouuced. They Ul'•eara).
out the errors of su~h ideM. IU.L·
ing that ~ large pereentaa-e or
South Americans 111re blond and
blue.eyed and their temperramtntl
ore not unlike thoile of their north·
e1n ne ighbo1~ lie sta·c~ed vea·y
plain~)• t hree out!\tnndln~t ehnroc­tel'islics
or the peOJllc or South
Ameden, which we would do well
to remcmbe1': fo"'irst, thnt flft.y per·
cent of the SpaniAh tongue i1 mode
~lory Alice C•'oth or St.
(Continued on P•ge 6)
An- up of gesture., \'C1'it.sble proof of
(Continued on Pal[e 6)
Field Day Today!
The annual •'Field Day" will be
held this afternoon here on the
College tampus. General Chnia·­man
will be Pntricia O'Grady.
It will be a day or run ro•·
evc•·rone. A basebnll game be·
tween Lhc factllt)• nnd studentf!,
directed by Jeanne Lennon, will
be lhe big featUJ'C or the doy.
There will also be a grand fnia·,
hot dOJC$, pop and ie:e cream. for­tune
te:Jiing and a raffle.
2 THE GLEANER
TH E GLEANER BETTER MEN Dear Staff,
NAZARETH COLLEGE
Publication Oftice: George P. Burns Press. lnc., 49~fjl ~011..h Watet• St. H'';:;._~n rises r.·om pmye•· ft belle!l'
vVittt this final issue of the Gleaner, it seems to me
that a few words of thanks and appreciation are in order.
While at times getting an issue out felt like a great sb·ain.
it real ly has been fun. If I "bawled you out'' about dead­lines.
etc., or asked you to do something especially difficult,
you always came through-and fo1· this I am grateful.
J~ IJ i~ 1n·ayer is answet·ed/'
=V=O=L=.=X='=IX=' ====T=B=U=R=S=D=A=Y=-=M=A=Y= I=I=, =1=9=44======:-l=o=. =6 ~~,•:d: ~~,~~~t n~~~.wol'id
Betlet• men . ,
Particularly
Published Montbly
The Student!i of Naz.a1·cth College. Rochester! N. Y.
I:O lTOR·IN·1~( rfdn o·c rady
An·r t:OI'rOR
.Mndl.'line Nue:c:lt~Ul
LI"T'P.RARY F.OITOR
flohry Lombardo
CIRCULATION MANA(if~tt
Oe-.•erly Jone-e
F.XCt-IANCf: t-:I)ITOR
TYPISTS
Nieolina Levante
MRrla U~rlt>
Ooi'Othy Smhh
Uarb•r• Schr~lc
U~v(l rl.:r McConnell
Mary Sehe"k
N'&WS STAPf'
Maur~en Uenry
Ma r~: arel "McOt'rmott
VfnclniJI Kl••
Teren Riley
t'EA'rUJt~ STAFF
Mnrii! Dl Geonr:lo
OUSlNt:SS STAFF
Ui!ttY l)rt.eo11
J•n• JAtlty
l.oyola Nolan
a.t.rtha Sh~edy
f1orenc~ Het11ler
llelel) bubu
Rosemary Connor Mildred Okol.:.wln Jt'an Schoen
Oeraldint: Cr11mer
1943
SOCJ f.:TY STA J.'F
Martha C•lln~ther
MUSIC STAt•p
Rolltlmary s~an1on
Mem~r
Rssociated Collet5icrte Press
The World Is Waiting· ·
Cynthltt Smith
Corrine F'reoer
1944
The orde1· has been given in Eng land-the ten mile
coastal area is not to be visited without official govern­mental
permission. Visitors may not go into or get out of
England except the American, Russian and British repre­sentatives.
All is in preparation for the signal to be given.
To quote a British minister, "from now on the hour glass
is running out minute by minute." Yes, the whole world is
waiting with anxious hearts to hear the fatal forward
command.
The world is waiting. The Christian world is p•·aying.
Pn•ying that thP. invasion may hP. to thP. point with "~ little
blood shed as possible. We here at Nazareth are but a
small group in the vast ocean of praying souls. But our
prayers are invading heaven with the others. We want our
brotheo-s, friends and fathers to come back soon. We want
them to ccme baelftl't of Cant~dn, i$ far more intolerant
ca·own. wHJ'm, and p1·cjudiced tow.wd~ Catholics: than is Quebt!t, the Catholic part
And welcome i\!i the stove on n of Canada, toward:s Protc:stants.
e hilly moan'?
A hnrbicgcr of h:=tppines.s,
lcngc bold
Now let. us ~ uppose fot· a moment that n:, ~r cent or the people
n ehal- of Jl'clnnrl belonged to some P1otest:mt org :m i~atio n, would they have
u C~ttholic President?
'l'o forget uoubles. or worldly
cm·es, and old
Grievances nnd wordcs, or tomot··
row's pnlrt, then cry
IJt glee when noting such joy in
the ~ ky.
--­MY
BED!
(A Boarder'• Blue•)
Six feu long of tirnbe.1·
To hold my wea1·y boni2S
It !eaves me quite limbet·
ACt~:a- an$wcdng telephones!
Four Ceet in width or g irth
To tOll;!'\ tu·ms and legs about­It
may not be a lower be .. th
BuL it sure iR plenty RtOut.
Two feet high nbove the floor
I flout ns in the sky!
Another bed could no mon:
Be loved thnn thil'! by J.
MARINA Lu NASA
DAILY MASS
FOR
PEACE
AND
F.XAM';; !
Let us suppose t.hat the people or Fl'ance 01· Italy were aU mem·
hers of the same Pt·otestant faith, would they have e l:!c:led a Jew tor
President ot· Prim@ Ministet·?
11 95 Jhla· tent of the men in Sou th Amet'iea belonged to the:
Masonic Ordea·, would they have elected a C;1tho:ie, D non-Mason
P1·esident?-Out· Sunday Visitol'.
Of Age Now
Laura Loui~e Sko.kcy '-t7
I am grown up, they tell me. now
And thete are thingi:i thnt I !Should know.
I have sct?n a cruelty in bea uty ~
I have ptayed nnd my C)H~Is htwe been tentful ;
L bavc learn'd of costs, of loss, of duty;
And too, 1 have found that love is painful:
Is thlan. The
~·egistl'ation of six new student.s,
however, has made it a reality.
Many more new students art! ex­pected
in the fall, and when they
anive they will be. allowed to join
the newl)• fol'med m·t club. Clalled
1'The Thumbtack."
At a recent meeting, the otllcel'lS
for H)44·45 w~te elected: Doris
Dierdorf, Pre~idcnt; Madeline Nu·
dtclli, Viee-Pt"esident; and Loi1;
Capozzi, S c e •· e t a r y-Tn~a5urer.
Monthly meeth1gs will be he ld and
tours or gullet·ies nnd exhibits will
be at'l'anged.
Sister De Sal that tight
he.t·c. within our venerable hnJI$,
it was being done on n SCJlle hith­erto
unimagined. TAlk about tight·
ening the rule floated about us at.
every turn. But of course, it didn't
concern us, We had always keJH.
at a saie distance fl'om the in~
ll'ingement of any rule. Our seli­csteem
g a·ew by leaps and bounds.
This waili just beginning to make
us 1·eatize what good Jitt1e gil·ls
we hnd always been.
They say thnt t.he powet of sug.
gerstion is s trong . We ll , whatever
it wns that caused it, we still don't
know. But it was Fl'·iday - you
know, the day which always isn't
quite all here. since we are a ll
looking forwaa·d to that nice &Jeep
we can get "tomor1-ow morning."
And it wasn't. as if we'd planned
il. It just happtmcd. Like this.
Quite unexpectedly, the whole
clas~ was Jet out of ehem. lectut·e.
Fift).' whole minutes just th1·own
at us! Well, Nanc:y had a h ead ~
ache. And f hadn't had any sleep
!or two weeks ( thanks to our his ..
tory assignme nt). Quite natural·
ly, we both headed for a nice nap.
That wus a ll right.
\Ve mtpped io1· fifty minutes.
That was 0. K.
But then came that ominous
warning-the be11. We were due
in rt e lnss. But we we re also quite
eom{oJ't.able, thank you. Um·mm,
felt almost like the atmosphe t•e in
Tennyson's the Wtut.·Eatcn. So
drowsy ... and it wasn't as i£ we
wm•ft "cutting" f o1• n<1 rf'!a~on nt
all . . , we both !elt quite ill , , ,
and we had been so good since
Septembcl' . . . never had cut a
clatss . .. and since everyone else
was doing it, why, we would be
praet.ic.ally e ntitled to one c.ut.
We didn•t bud~te for nnothel'
fifty minutes. And such is the
il'ony of life, that our consciences
wca·e perfectly c lear. Blissfully
peacc:Cul1 we wet·e, as Horace
\vould put it, "carpe .. ing the diem."
Came the next bell, and, nicely
l'efreshed, we sighed and set out
fot' the locker toom.
"Where have you kids been!"
Thi:s from one of ou1· fellow cla.~ . ­l'nlltes.
''Why w~ren ' l you two in
elass?" This from another.
"The dean eame in-she look
the names of nlJ the girls who
weren't in class • ·"
\Ve laughed. Of cour·se, the}•
we1·e only tl-yi ng to scare us. But
we WCI'Cn't go;ng tO be taken in
by il.
But it was true-as we soon
found to ou1· grent discomfiture.
It seems that about fHty percent.
of lhe class had taken that vet·y
occ-asion to follow suit.
Yes - take my word for it­you're
always caught.
MARY LOMBARDO, '46 _,___
Frosh Entertain Big Sisters
The Juniors we1·e the gu ests
of the Freshmen at thcil· u Big
Sister Banquet," Monday, ~fay 8.
The banquet was held al the
B•·ook-Len Country Club at 6:30
P.M.
Nancy He1·ron wns Ronortu')'
Chairman of the banquet. and
Cynthia Smith was the General
Chairman. The assisting chnirmen
were: publicity and reservations,
Maureen Hem·y: decorations, Et ..
eanor Malone)' ; invitations. Joan
Pu1·eeU: programs, Alice Foley.
Why Journalists
Die Young
"The lYJ)Ogrnphical e.rror is a
!l!JiJll>ery t hing and sly,
You can hunt till you tn·e diny,
but it somehow wm get by.
Till the fo1·ms are off l he pt'es.ses
lt is stl'angc how still it keeps ;
It shl'inks down in a corner. ~tnd
it neve1· .stirs or peeps,
That typographical error, too
small fo1• human eyes;
Till the ink is on the pap~r. when
it JtrOws to mountain size.
The boss he stares with horror,
then he grab!' his hAir and
gl'onns ;
The copy reader drops his head
upon his hnnds and moans­The
1'COHtinde 1· o! the issue may
be clean as cltism or
my secretary, 1 wt\8 godmother­and
didn't h•ve to wor1·y about
dropping the baby! The- reverence
and devotion with which abe read
the profeuion of foit.h 11ent little
thrills racing O\'tr me. Oorolh),S
husband. Father )foore. and I
were the only onu preiSent at the
ceremony late one Saturday eve­ning.
The ba•·c little 1-oom. the
chaJ>el, teemed f!Uddenly very love ..
ly in the candle light while the
2olemn wo1·da uttered by our con·
vert seemed. once »POken, to group
thelll$elve~ all around us. I couldn't.
help but wish that C\·~ry adult
might witn~u auch a seene.
Pie~. remember me to all the
~i&ters, espccial))t the Dear Desn.
PATRICIA BARRY.''
Jean Teddy hns announced that
iL t€!tt will be he ld !or the Secre·
tnrial De1uu·tnicnt. Jnnc Lally i.s
chairman or th~ tea. which will be
an adieu to the Senlon.
Said Charlea Kinlr.'ley, f•mous
playwright: "We act u lhougb
e:omfort and luxury we.·e the chid
requirements of lift. when all that
we need to mnke \II really happy
i.s someLhing to be enthusiastic
about/•
GCtorgc BcriHU'd Shnw: H'fhc
secret or being miecrable is to
have leisure to bother about
whether you art hnppy or not-."
Mark Twain: .. Alway$ do right.
This will gratify oom• ~pie and
astonish the rest.''
By KAY CUTLER, '40
The old "I'm worki!'lg m)' way Not quite so C)'llieal were the
through college" routine used by girl ecout leaders and t-he JHLri~h
so muny mag11zlnc JSUiesmen seemt WOI'kcr who intended to so settle·
to be di81l J>ItCtLrin~ from t.he Amer .. ment wot'k nnd social l'Chnbilitu·
ican scene, but rl ut·in,(:' its hey-dRy Lion a ftcr their college cou1·su
that pathetic I!Ob•$tOrY pro't·ided wcl'e completed. Girl~~; engaged in
n1aterial to•· most of the country's light factor)• \\Ot·k seemed to be
gag-" rite.-. and radio comedians cogni1ant or the !att Lhat they
It wu funny, yes. but it contained we~ doing what the)' could to
a great deal of truth. Many of our help the war efl'ort. rather than
ambitioutt. ind~pendent young col· lfl':kinK any personal compensation
1~$rt ~tudc.nt.s do pan~time work to from their t.ask, although one tuch
help pa)• theh· way through school. worker pointed out the neeeuity
They nrt di&eovc•·ing cady in life of bein:r flblc to work with em·
the jo)• of being nble to ~A>' "1 d id ployc~t if you would ~ucc~sdu ll)•
it myself." All r~n Cl' rcmnrk·
nble talent Cor "puLting over" n
11ong nt•e truly outstanding. He had
the nudienee literally "in thP
aisles" with his !;Ong t•Melody in
4 F" and in the theater lobby
acene. Take it from us it was real­ly
entertaining stuff. 11 you haven't
1-t~n it, don't miss it-it'a playinc
at one o( the local houaes this
week.
Another one we likl.'d very much
whieh we saw quite !\OI'I'IC time tiJtO
- just didn't get a 1·ound to talk·
ing about it-is j'Song of Rutteln."
It.'s t1 deeply MO\'ing love ~&Or)• act
ofT to perfection with the most
romantic: of all musie- T11chai.
kowsky'a. That S""an P•l•n Ia an
attreu to b~ reckoned with. She
plays her part of the Ru.ian cirl ..
pianist with amazing warmth,
sympathy and restraint. Her per·
formance is ~dee:t even to the
J>oint whel'e she play~ (&he doetm't
•·cn11)•) the ever-popuhu• conc:c1·to
of Tschaiko~ky. Her ruclll l CX·
J>ression.s here a•·e 1\UJU!rb. Robert
Taylo1· plays the young Ame1·ican
tonductor who Cnlls ;n lovt with
her. Though hi_s performance
d~•n't exactly measure up to ltiss
J)ete"'. it was well done.
We're \·ery tired of watching
Rita Hayworth walt:& through J)iC·
t.ul"el in strapless gownt . If Ahc
could act. that. mtgbt ~avr her.
llowevct•, one point in het• favot•
Is hct· dancing. ( 1\ "Cove1• Cill'l"
we became ve.•·>~ bon.otl with her
wnrdrobe, but~ oh. how we liked
Gene Kelly! That boy can execute
dante steps! The co!o:a wtr~ ab·
1oluttly gorsteous.. The mu:slc wu
excellent--especially the aonr that
everybody is ~inging now, hl..ong
Aro and Far Away,.' E\'t Arden
tu•·ncd in a very good perlor1n·
nnte in he1· role of thc fa~t talk·
lng, wise..CI'UCkiJlg SC!Cl'CUH')'.-J.C, ---------
to get by" or uonly mJ much n, I
have Lo." One discoui'Rged llludent
remnrked that she spent "innum­erable"
hours at her atudte..
Othen une\·er kept count .. or \'A·
rit'd the amou.nt of Lime
F1-Gm a pe:rtl!al of the- anawers
to the-se questionnaire~ Yle can aee
that \.he American collef(e student
i11 doing his best to sec ur'(~ nn cdu­t"
lion nnd n:t the snme time I'Cmnin
tinnncinlly independent ns [Ill ' na he
It' nb1c. He is wot·king !or \'ictory,
working to put himself tht•oup:h
athool and at. the same time ketp..
in~ abreast of bas st udie~.
Visitors-A Menace
By MARY C. WHEELAND, '47
It should not hnpJ>en to a dog.
I do not believe it does. (Of eouroe
I do not know (t tnlking dog bu~
just b)' obse1·ving theil' wny11 I
have come to this conclusion. Just
like a detective, don't you think!)
But ic. does happen to the always­plagued
.. with • aomethinJ human
being. And what om I talking
about! Why. I am talking about
the ''bustle and bustle" ~•used b)•
tbtt forewarned arrival or com ..
pan)•. Such commotion as Is caused
i3 terdble to witne". The house·
hold which is lO be hono1·cd with
the nrrival or gue3t.a just escapes
a nervou$ b1·e$k·down while try­ing
to make the house look like • '
palace. The gueau can not compli·
m~nt the result brought about by
this strenuous labor be-cau~e then
the host.HS would avspeet t.hat·
they know that the hou.se does not
always look ._,. nitt.. (They have­had
the $.8me experience, no
doubt.) But the work only begins
with the. coming ot the g-uc&t3 and
the household is in the !tnte of
smnic until their depnrtu•·e. When
guests dep3rt thin$r& •·cturn to nor­mal
and the du•t bc~elna to collect
ao as to be ready for the next
guests.
Although the rueat who warns
the lu~lry pe-ople Lh•t he ia comintt
is a menac~. the untxpec:ted vlsl·
tor is one to be d1·eoded mosL He
is the one who "dropt" In when
t.he house looks I'ClHI)' fo1· t Jwing
clea ning but the "rlctu• little wom·
nn" has not got. around to it yet.
As the hosteS8 gr~eta thl" vititor
the dirt on the window teems so
thick that it could be shovelled off.
The t:unain rod~ Ktm to ug un­der
the weight or the t upposed·to-­be
white curtains atUI .. ted with
dust. There seemJ to be a ,~err
1-light difference between the­amount
o£ dirlln yot.u• vi(.lo1·y gat­den
nnd the amount. thau. Jl'lenm~;
up at you hom the tlom·. You
opologize for the 8JlJ)COI'IH\Ce of
the house and Lhen leL the g·uut
carry on a monologue berau~e you
are too embar-ta.!$ed to a~ak. Re-­ceiving
such a cool rt.'~tptlon. the
unexpected \'i~itor does not stay
tong. It ~eems like yeana to the
host.e&S who hasn't a thing in the
house t.o eat Rnd !ears that that
gue~t i!J going to at.ay !or dinner.
When the guest. leaves, only the
tonible pnin cnuscd by JlOisoning
keeps the hostcu f1·om committing
fluicide.
I ha\•e a little slttn which keepl
comp:tn)• away It reads, ... keep t
• .w: .. ao a hobby. Pita·• OJIus hltahu•ky. But J
I Th w· d student at Mount St .J oseph Aead- have to admit thnt he doesn't try n e I e \-Vorld cmy, Buffalo, i~ the winner of the to convert all or us to hi• beliefs,
By DAW:-.i HEALY, '4& SSOO Mu$ie Scholarship for '"hich and that's somet hing in his: ftwor."
n cornpetitive examination was "WeH, I neve1· knew Bud us we!J
taken in Mna·ch. Marr J-osephine u tsome of the fellows. you know,
Anot hCI' N. c. g irl doing big Miller of Canandaigua. and Q but. ht didn't nffeet In@: U5 one or
things rol' the wua· cfl'ol't-Dett~· Senior student at c. A h~s been those 'holy J oes'.''
. R. Professor Gives Talk C1 iffin llnrry '33. a succes• in th• owllrded the $800 Art S~hola•·ship, "Oh, he isn't, at all t~nt w•y. Al J (Continued [rom Pnge l ) field of psychiata·ic :social y,·ork, for whieh exhibits were I'>Ubmitted least., he doesn t show it o utward .. l hus taken an executive position on April 15th. ly But I 1 cmembC:I' when we were f:e truth thnt ma"l is doomed to with the local Red Cro!s Prom - · just 1dds and a bunch o! us werf.'
abol' with his hands; Secondly, t-~cw M('xico it h:-ts been •·epoJ·ted H~l-e is a lette-;:--;\b";;h:m Lin- t Amping up in the woods; theJ'C
t!~e South Ameritun'~ dhdiko Cor ~ eoJn wrote to Mn.jor Ramsey: we1'e sevct•o.l CathoHes ~md Pl'O·
on·.•cntion Amuslng was his stor.v that Mn~)' L. Bennett is doing E-xecutive Mansion h!1tants. too, but Bud was the only
medica.! ~;ocinl work !or the slate October 16, 1861 one who got up Sunday and ,-..•ent
(the South American opera.goer My dear Sh·: ~o Chtll"eh But I guess everybod)•
ho du1·ing inte.,rniss:00 time OS· Wedding bell$. nt·~ r inging, hrt\Te Th(> lady beal'er of this sal'S she has his own ideas on the subject.
cntatiou.dy ri:;eR r1·om his seat. in been t·inging and from all indica· has two sons who want to wot-k. I ! told him that he'd outgt•ow his,
he t hird row in t.he OJ'(:hc$tn:t and tions will continue to 1·inJl: for the S~t. them at it. if J)O~sibl('. Want· ; and he ju!t. laug hed it otT"
urning to the audience, fixes. hi! Alumnae. Jane Bauman Lavery
p~rn g lusses on some blushing '40 has left with her hu!'iband to
amsel and st-ares away to his stat·t housekeeping in 'foronto
ing to work is so J'B1·e n want that " ls there ttnythincr seriously
it 1;houl(l be encouraged. wrong with him. Bob?"
Yout"s truly, HThe doctors don't seem lo be
A. Lincoln. able to di4gnose it nny better thnn
had fled. when my thought.• had
turned to nly fr iend.
After getting in bed, the nag­ging
thought kept going t ht·ough
my mind thnt llud wa.sn•t going to
be 0 . K. by the end of this week
01' any other week. In a moment
of anguigh and sudden fear, I
dropped to my knees by the bed
nnd silently begged God, or what.
ever highe1· powers there were1 to
have things come right !ot· Bud.
The d1'iving fca1· seemed to sub·
side aftet· this action, and 1 slept
soundly,
The next da~;r. the weather was
made to ordet; Mom said they bod
ordc•·ed it ahead fol' me~ and 1
ttlmost believed her.
My t.a.n. which I had lost dudng
the wintu, returned to me and J
got in a lot of swimming and flsh·
ing. We entered our sailboat, "The
Elder Brot.hcr," and she came in
fil'st. But none of these activities
held much interest. for me. i\·tom
looked wot·t·ied because J was wor­l')
o'ing.
One J'llorning at. br·eak!ast, she
reached for my hand and said,
.. Bud, dcat·, ( wish you•d stop wor­a
·ying; you've pn s..~Sed your exams
and now you'"e t e.n weeks ahead
of you to relax."
''l'm noL wot·rying about sw that, but we were
just hoping that those frowns we1·e
thC! be~ i 1win g of a re!ol'mation in
you,'' Dad put. in.
' jl can't seem to get Bud off m~'
mind."
"La::;t. summe t·, it was a twenty.
yea1· old blonde you wet·e in love
wit.h. l don't know which ill worse,
your love.·sickness or you.t· con­stunt
wonying/'
"No, Dad, t his is serious; Bud's
been going down fast in the lns l
few months. If he could have t...'lk­(
01"1 tim(l oiT .-nd t•ested, ha might
have been all l'ight, but he wanted
lo get his term completed. Now,
he's r isrht down in bed and who
knows when he'll be up?"
Later, I took the tar down to
the st.n.tion and had the em· fi lled.
While I was waiting, I got out o(
the c:ur. Being out of cigarettes, I
decided l'd bette~· get ~;,om~- it
wouldn't do , both fot· me and my
nerves. to have to dt·i .. •e all the
way to New York with nothinSt to
smoke
As J wa.s slipping nlong the high­WU)'
again. all pro .. •ided fo\', it
stat·ted a·aining htll'd; J could bat·e­ly
tsee the t'oad ahead o-r me. I
slowed the car a little. but the
vi ·ion was still tenibly hazy and I
had been dxiving so long that I
couldn't trust m)>' eyu muth long­er.
l ncal'ly fell asleep se\Ttwal
time~ at the wheel, but finall~· I
turned the radio up until it blared
(Continued on Page 6)
.cart's content. The thh·d point, Catherine ilhlrl\s1 '36 is now ,...--------------.1 a green bunch of fi rst·aiders.. It
•·· Canfield stressed in ail •••·ious- ltl"$. Angus lluchan. The lovely FAVORS . TROPHIES makes me b u•·n ; his P!ln.>nts h!lve
I
had :;pecialist Hfter specialist, and , ---------- --
ness - tbat is, pe~·!onalization wedding took place April 11. CLUB JEWELRY they all go awn}", not knowing any
SCHOOL and COLLEGE mote than when they came u he's JOSEPH J . \'Cr-1\us socialization. The South Peggy Meca·c '42, wc:Jl-known
fremin Mission Unit P1·es.ident
during her senior yea 1·. is to be a
May bride. Good luck. Peg! We
wi ~ h we were you.
merican will think in terms of
he individual ; we at-e inclined to
be grc-ga.rious, to work in g roups,
nd organizations. 'l'hi$ one point
is at the bottom or aU the political
trouble found in the S. A. republic
1
The South Ame t•ican is pl'one to
act. and react purely as nn individ­ual
•·egardless of t.he g-roup.
o... Canfield concluded his talk
\\'ith a fitting tribute to OUJ' South
me.rican neighbors as being ex~
client. good neigbbOI'S; J)C.OI)]e Of
fair mind and generous heart,
nd nbove all :_t vet·y good·hum.
red people. Dr. Canfield's deep
no\•lledge of th~e peo)lle comes
with years or experienee with
them, having made many tOUt"$
1$0\tth o! the border." Be has .. v-ril-
~l~ n several books of geat inte•·est
o u.s. especial1y to studen ts of
panish language.
lnst ) '(H'Lr'!l May Queen, lovely
Jo)'Cl Loftus, will reign ngain
fter wedding is scheduled for
May 31.
RINGS not out of the hospital by the end
of the week, I'm going down to BUCKLEY
The Metal Arts Co. New York to see him. Well. e:u·ly tomorl'ow befo~·c the
742 Portland Ave. tlsh know we' re coming.''
Roeheoter, N. Y. After bidding my parent" and
"Our Representative friend• good-night, I went slowly
Funeral
Director
Wlll Gladly Call" to my •·oom. All the forme•· gnie~yiL-----------....J
Ji'JoJ·e-nc~ Rog~in '42 Rnd l<1athie 1 L ___________ _JII,-- - -----------------------;
Statt '43 were seen having A won·
de•·fui time •t Big Top Uop The .------------­Alumnae
are always very wel­come.
Rosemn1·y Scbamine '40, ha.s
been teaching in lrondeq\roit. She
will continue to teach, but begin·
ning in Septcmbet• she will be. on
Long Island.
Vh·ginia Bogdan '43, and Mon·
ica Sen•as '41, w~re on the Panel,
14Catholie Organists in Action" at
the Convention of the Na t ional
Catholic l\t usie Educat01"5 Ai;.J;oC::in·
tion. AJU'il 29. l t was the New
York Chapter that met hen~- at
TOWN TALK
BAKERY, Inc.
601 PULLMAN Ave.
Phone
Glenwood 6772
£yery Day
We Go
Your Way
Nazat·eth. IL ___________ ......J
DRINK ONLY THE BEST
Sea/test Homogettized
Vitamin D Milk
BRIGHTON PLACE DAIRY
6
~?---·-·-.............. , __ , _______ .,, __ ,_,,_, __ ,_,_, ____ ,~
! SPORTIN' LIFE I
j By DOTTIE WECMAN, '41 ~
&... ........................................................................................................................................ ~
T H E G LEA>IER
Chemical Analysis
of Women
Syn1boi- WOE.
Here h ll'· tht.' hun edition of I Med